Opportunities for 

Vocational Training 
IN New York City 



Compiled by 

Elsie Borg Goldsmith 



VOCATIONAL SERVICE FOR JUNIORS 

17 Lexington Avenue, New York City 



PRICE, TWENTY. FIVE CENTS 



opportunities for 

Vocational Training 
IN New York City 



Compiled by 
Elsie Borg Goldsmith 



PUBLISHED BY 

VOCATIONAL SER\^ICE FOR JUNIORS 
17 Lexincton Avenue 



January, 1922 

price, 25 CENTS 






Copyright 1922, by Vocational Service for Juniors 






CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Foreword v. 

Preface vi. 

Conditions Under Which Children May Work ... ix. 

Schedule of Schools 

I. Commercial Education 2-21 

II. Industrial Education 22-57 

III. Semi-Professional Education 58-71 

Index of Subjects 73-92 

Index of Schools 93-94 



FOREWORD 

THE Vocational Service for Juniors gives scholarships to boys 
and girls between fourteen and eighteen years, who would 
otherwise be forced out of school by economic conditions, to enable 
them to get the education and training that seem likely to develop 
their highest powers as men and women and as working members of 
society. 

With the permission of the Department of Education and the 
helpful cooperation of individual principals, the Vocational Service 
for Juniors maintains counselors in elementary and Junior High 
Schools. By means of questionnaires, intelligence and other tests, 
talks on occupations, conferences with teachers, nurses and parents, 
and individual interviews, they help boys and girls to make an in- 
telligent choice of their next step in education or if necessary of work. 

The Vocational Service for Juniors seeks to complete this pro- 
cess of vocational adjustment through its employment bureaus which 
place workers under eighteen years of age in investigated positions, 
chosen as far as possible to meet the needs and ambitions of the 
individual, and which follow them up when placed. 

These three fields of activity afiford the Vocational Service for 
Juniors an opportunity for close relations with adolescent boys and 
girls and some understanding of their varying interests and problems, 
as well as a rather intimate knowledge of school and working condi- 
tions. To put all the information and data which it thus acquires at 
the disposal of the community is one of the aims of this organization. 
It is with this in mind that the study "Bank Positions" and the 
bibliography "Investigations of Industries in New Y'ork City" have 
been published and that this Directory, thanks largely to the gen- 
erosity of Mrs. Elsie Borg Goldsmith, has been undertaken. 

This foreword is meant not so much to describe the work and 
aims of the Vocational Service for Juniors as to ask all readers to tell 
it frankly how it can be of greater use to workers in the same field 
and to the community at large. 

Alice K. Pollitzer, Director. 



PREFACE 

THIS book is issued in the belief that it will fill the need for a 
revised edition of the Directory published in 191 8 by the Com- 
mittee for Vocational Scholarships and entitled "Opportunities for 
Vocational Training in New York." In this book an attempt has 
been made to show the changes which have occurred in the educational 
field since 1918. and to mention the schools which have been started 
since that date, as well as the older schools. Furthermore, a limited 
number of private schools has been added. 

It is expected that this Directory will be of aid to teachers, to 
counselors, and to parents in guiding adolescent children into the 
training for vocations best suited to their individual capacities and 
needs. The book is so simple in form and treatment that it is believed 
that girls and boys will themselves obtain effective guidance from it. 

Since the previous Directory was published some interesting 
developments have taken place along educational lines. Educational 
methods and programs have in many instances been improved. On 
the other hand, comparatively few new schools have been started in 
recent years, owing to conditions during the war and its aftermath. 
In fact, several small schools — ^especially those teaching different 
branches of art — have been forced to close their doors, at least tem- 
porarily. 

As this book is a purely vocational directory it deals only with 
those schools giving vocational courses. No general academic schools 
or courses are included. Since the Directory is of interest to boys 
and girls between the ages of about fourteen and twenty years, no 
primary schools have been mentioned herein. The boroughs covered 
are Manhattan, Bronx, and Brooklyn, as the largest number of schools 
are found in these boroughs. 

In the subject index the schools have been grouped according to 
subject matter taught. In the main body of the book they have been 
grouped under three main headings, although some schools must nec- 
essarily appear under more than one heading, (i) Those schools 
giving commercial courses form one group. (2) Schools giving 
industrial courses form the second group. (3) Schools giving semi- 
professional courses fall into the third group. By semi-professional 

VI. 



are meant those schools and courses which do not require a college 
degree as a prerequisite. 

Public vocational and trade schools of secondary grade have been 
listed. Included among them is the Haaren High School, at Hubert 
and Collister Streets, which is interesting as the only high school in 
Manhattan which is run on the "co-operative plan." In Brooklyn, 
the Manual Training High School maintains industrial courses for 
boys, conducted in this way, but there is as yet no separate co-opera- 
tive public school in Brooklyn. Under the "co-operative plan," 
students divide their school term between vocational work done at 
schools and the same kind of work done in an industrial plant or 
business office. In other words, the school procures a part-time pay- ' 
ing job for the students, at the same time that they are still learning 
their vocations at school. This is claimed to result in more practical 
vocational education, and in greater efficiency and interest on the part 
of the student. 

An attempt has been made to list endowed schools giving voca- 
tional courses. A few corporation schools are also listed; very few, 
however, as only those corporation schools are included which give 
training so general in its nature as to be useful in any plant of that 
industry. Many corporation schools are efficiently and carefully run. 
but in the majority of cases, the training is confined to specific kinds 
of work carried on within the plan of the particular company served 
by the school. A few schools, however, offer a broader training in 
industrial methods and problems. 

Besides the types of schools above mentioned, the Directory in- 
cludes those private schools of which the members of the Vocational 
Service for Juniors have personal knowledge. Unfortunately it has 
not been feasible to list all the private schools in view of their very 
great number. It is earnestly rec[uested that officials who feel that 
their school should have had a place in this book notify the Secretary 
of the Vocational Service for Juniors in order that the School be 
listed in future, issues of this Directory. 

It will be found on looking over the data contained herein, that the 
most important cjuestions concerning each school have in all prob- 
ability been answered. In glancing over the columns marked 
"Scholarships" and "Remarks," some interesting facts will present 
themselves. Although some schools have relief funds, or free tuition 
in exceptional cases, very few offer scholarships to worthy pupils 
who cannot afford either the time or the funds to take a course of 

VII. 



training. Several schools, however, have a placement bureau and a 
follow-up system whereby they keep in touch with their pupils dur- 
ing the first years of their industrial careers. 

Grateful acknowledgment is made of the valuable assistance of 
the staff of the Vocational Service for Juniors. 

Elsie Borg Goldsmith, 
CJiairman, Siib-Committec on fJie Directory. 



Vill. 



CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH CHILDREN 
MAY WORK 

CHILDREN under 14 years of age may not be employed in any 
business or service whatever. This appHes equally to work 
during school hours, before and after school hours, on Saturdays, 
Sundays, and during vacation. Exception is made for selling or 
delivering newspapers by boys between 12 and 16 years of age and 
for theatrical and motion picture film work in which children under 
16 may be employed with the consent of the Mayo^;, but are not 
allowed to sing or dance. The employment of children under 14 in 
manufacturing carried on in tenements or in cannery sheds is deemed 
to be work for a factory, and is subject to factory prohibitions. 

Children 14 or 15 years of age may not be employed without 
an employment certificate obtained from the school authorities. 
Children under 16 years of age may not be employed in dangerous 
occupations (Section 146 of the Labor Law). 

To obtain an employment certificate a child must be 14 or 15 
years of age and must present the following, papers : 

1. ScJiool Record Certificate: 

Issued on parent's application by principal of school last 
attended by applicant. To secure this record children must 
have attended school at least 130 days during the twelve 
months next preceding their 14th birthday, or during the 
twelve months next preceding the date of application for 
the school record certificate. 14-year-old children must 
be graduates of a public, private, or parochial elementary 
school. Children 15 years of age must have completed the 
work of the first six years of the public elementary school 
or school equivalent thereto. 

2. Evidence of Age: 

One of the following papers must be produced which may 
be accepted only in the order given : 

(a) Transcript of birth certificate, baptismal certificate 
or passport. 

(b) Other documentary evidence such as an Ellis Island 
certificate of arrival, an insurance policy, etc. 

(c) Physician's certificate of age. 

IX. 



3. A Pledge of Employment: 

This is a statement that the employer who signs the paper 
will give the child immediate employment and describes 
the kind of work the child will be required to do and the 
number of hours per day he will be required to work. 

4. Certificate of Physical Fitness: 

If the above-mentioned papers are approved, the child 
takes them to the Board of Health and receives a certificate 
of physical fitness if he passes the examination given by the 
physician there. The certificate states that the child is in 
sound health and physically able to perform the work he 
intends to do. 

Factory work is prohibited for children between 14 and 15 before 
8 o'clock in the morning or after 5 o'clock in the evening or for more 
than eight hours in any one day or more than six days in any week. 
In mercantile establishments the opening hour is 8 A. M., the closing 
hour 6 P. M., but children may not work in these establishments for 
more than eight hours daily. 



X. 



Schedule of Schools 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Requirement.s 


Len^h ol 
Course 


Aub Secretarial 
School 


Secretarial 
Stenography 
Typing 


Approval of Di- 
rector 


Average 6 mos. 


2770 Broadway 


Typing (alone) 
Evening Course 






Ballard School 

Y. W. C. A. 
(Central Branch) 


Advertising- 
Banking 
Bookkeeping 
Piling 


Member of 
Y. W. C. A. 


Dependent on 
course 


610 Lexington 
Ave. 


Foreign trade 
French 
Italian 
Law 

Multigraphing 
Political economy 
Public speaking- 
Salesmanship 
Spanish 
Stenography 
Typing 
Secretarial Training 

English 

Stenography 

Typing 






Bay Ridge High 
School 

Fourth Avenue 


Day School 
Booklceeping 
Civics 

Office practice 
Spanish 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


1-4 yrs. 


and 67th St. 
Brooklyn 


Stenography 
Typing 

Night School 
BookkeeiJing 
Economics 
Law 

Stenography 
Typing 






Blind Women's 
Workshop 


Stenography 

and Dictaphone Typing 


Blind 
Age 16-50 


Dependent on 
individual 


111 E. 59th St. 








(N. Y. Ass'n for 








Blind) 









Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees Scholarships 


Remarks 


Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 
or by arrange- 
ment 


Female 


$125 

$10 per month 

$8 per month 
Books extra 


Part scholar- 
ships 




Sept. -June 

Summer 
session 
June-July 


9:30 a. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


$15 to $18 
$120 




Tuition free in 
exception al 
cases 

Student Aid 
Fund 

Employment 
bureau 


Sept. -June 


8:35 a. m.- 
3 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 




Vocational 
adviser 


Open all yr. 


8:45 a. m.- 
5 p. m. 

Saturdays 
9 a. m.- 
12:30 p. m. 


Female 


Free 







I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Xante 


Courses 


Admission 
Reqijireineuts 


Len^h o£ 
Course 


Bronx Evening 
High School for 
AVomen 

Prospect Ave. 
and Jennings St. 


Arithmetic 

Bookkeeping 

Law 

Office practice 

Stenography 

Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


2-4 yrs. 


Brooklyn Evening 
High School 

Putnam and 
Marcy Aves. 


Bookkeeping 
Law 

Stenography 
Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


3 yrs. 


BnshAvick Evening 
Trade School 

400 Irving Ave., 
Brooklyn 


Boolvkeeping 

English 

Salesmanship 

Spanish 

Stenography 

Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 

Employed dur- 
ing day 


1-3 yrs. 


Bushwick High 
School 

Irving Avenue, 
Brooklyn 


Bookkeeping 

Law 

Spanish 

Stenography 

Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


1-4 yrs. 


Central Evening 
High School for 
Women 

Nostrand Ave. 
and Halsey St., 
Brooklyn 


Arithmetic 

Bookkeeping 

Law 

Office practice 

Stenography 

Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


3-4 yrs. 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept. -June 


7:45 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


7:25 p. m.- 
10:15 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 






Sept.-May 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon. and Wed. 

or Tues. and 

Thurs. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


9 a. m.- 
3:35 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 

Female 


Free 


Several 


Placement 
secretary 


Sept.-June 


7:30 p. m.- 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 




Placement 
Committee 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Commercial High 
School 

Albany Ave. and 
Bergen St., 
Brooklyn 

Annex 
P. S. 15, 
Third Ave. and 
State St., B'klyn 



Arithmetic 

Bool\I\;epin£? 

Correspondence 

Stenography 
Typing' 



Coopei* Union for 
the Advance- 
ment of Science 
and Art 

Fourth Ave. and 
Sth St. 



Secretarial course 
Bookkeeping' 
English 
Stenography 
Typing 



Admisition 
Requirements 



Licngrth of 
Course 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



1-4 yrs. 



Age 18-35 

Exams in Eng- 
lish, composi- 
tion, dictation, 
penmanship 
and spelling 



T^A mos. 



East Side Evening 
High School 

P. S. 20, 
Rivington and 
Forsyth Sts. 



Advertising 

Arithmetic 

Bookkeeping 

Economics 

Law 

Salesmanship 

Spanish 

Stenography 

Typing 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



3 yrs. 



Eastern Evening 
High School for 
Men 

P. S. 122, Har- 
rison Ave. and 
Heyward St., 
Brooklyn 



Advertising 
Arithmetic 
Bookkeeping 
Economics 
Law 
Spanish 
Stenography- 
Typing 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



3-4 yrs. 



Eastern District 
High School 

Marcy Ave. and 
Keap St. 



Bookkeeping 

English 

Languages 

Stenography 

Typewriting 



E 1 e m e n t a I- y 
school gradu- 
ate or equiva- 
lent education 



Era.smus Hall 
High School 

Flatbnsh a n d 
Church Aves., 
Brooklyn 



Stenography 
Typing 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 















Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept. -June 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 




Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-u p 

system 


Oct.-May 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 


Female 


Free 

Expenses for 
books, materi- 
als, etc. 






Sept. -June 


7:15 p. m.- 
10:15 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 






Sept.-June 


7:10 p. m.- 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 






Sept. -June 


8:40 a. m.- 
4:00 p. m. 


Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


8:30 a. m.- 
2:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 
Female 


Free 












7 







I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Xame 


Courses 


Admission 
Slequirements 

1 


1-ienR-th of 


Evander Childs 


Advertising 


Elementary 


1-4 yrs. 


High School 


Bookkeeping 


school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 




Creston Ave. 


Law 






and 184th St. 


Stenography 






Annexes: 


Typing 






P. S. 46, 








Briggs Ave. and 








196th St. 








P. S. 8, 








Briggs Ave. and 








Mosholu Pkwy. 








P. S. 16, 








Carpenter Ave. 








near 240th St. 








George Washing- 


Bookkeeping 


Elementary 


4 yrs. 


ton High School 


English 


school gradu- 
ate or equiva- 






Spanish 


lent education 




Broadway and 


Stenography 






Academy St. 


Typewriting 






Girls Commercial 


Accounting 


Elementary 


1-4 yrs. 


High School 


Bool^keeping 


school or 
e q u i va lent 


Dependent on 




Science 


education 


subject chosen 


St. Marks and 


Secretarial course (for post- 






Classon Aves., 


graduates) 






Brooklyn 


Stenography 
Typing 






Girls High School 

Nostrand Ave., 


Bookkeeping 
Economics 


Element ary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 


1-4 yrs. 


Halsey and Ma- 


Mathematics 


ucation 




con Sts., Brook- 


Stenography 






lyn 


Typing 






Grace Institute 


English 


Preference giv- 


1 yr. 




Stenography 


en to pupils 




149 W. 60th St. 


Typing 


with 2 yrs. 
High School 
education 





Hours 



Tuition and Fees Scholarships 



Rensarks 



Sept. -June 



9 a. m.-3 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



Sept, -June 



a. m.-4 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



Sept. -June 



8 a. m.-5 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Female 



Sept. -June 



Sept.-June 



Placement 
bureau 



Placement bu- 
reau 



8:40 a. m.- 
3:30 p. m. 



Day, 9 a. m.- 
4:15 p. m. 
Eve., 7 p. m 
9 p. m. 



Female 



Female 



Free 



Free 



Vocational 
committee 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Name 



Courses 



Admission 
Requirements 



Length of 
Course 



Ha a r e n 
School 



High 



Hubert and Col- 
lister Sts. 



Advertising 

Bookkeeping 

Economics 

Mathematics 

Merdiandising 

Organization (store) 

Salesmanship 

Stenography 

Textiles 

Typing 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation, or 
transfer from 
another H. S. 



3-4 yrs. 



Hebrew Technical 
School for Girls 

240 Second Ave. 



Bookkeeping 

Stenography 

Typing 

Office Training 



ig'h School 
Commerce 



of 



155 W. 65th St. 
Annexes: 
P. S. 67, 
120 W. 46th St. 
P. S. 166, 
132 W. 8 9th St. 



Accounting 

Advertising 

Banking 

Bookkeeping 

Economics 

Finance 

Investments 

Labor problems 

Law 

Materials of commerce 

Mathematics 

Office practice 

Salesmanship 

Statistics 

Stenography 

Typing 



Italian Evening 
School 

154 Hester St. 
(Children's Aid 
Society School) 



Age 14 

Elementary 
school diplo- 
ma 

Entrance and 
physical ex- 
ams. 



4 yrs. 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



4 yrs. 



Stenography 

Typing 

Office training 



Age 15 
Working papers 



1-3 yrs. 



10 



Hours 



Sept.-June 



9 a. m.-3 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Tuition and Fees 



Free 



Open all yr 



Sept.-June 



8:45 a. m. 
4 p. m. 



9 a. m.- 
2:45 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Female 



Scholarships 



Free 

$18-$25 for books 
and materials 



Male 



Sept.-June 



7:30 p. m. 
9:30 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



Free 



11 



llemarkis 



Alternate 
weeks In 
business 
houses for 
part of 
course 

Pupils paid 
marlvet rate 
while em- 
ployed 

Placements, 
super- 
vision in 
business and 
report of 
progress by 
"Co - ordina- 
tors'' of 
School 



Placement 
bureau and 
follow- up 

system 



Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
system 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Requirements 


Length of 
Course 


Julia Richinan 


Accounting' 


Elementary 


1-4 yrs. 


High School 

60 W. 13th St. 


Arithmetic 

Bookkeeping 

iDivics 


school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 




Annexes: 
P. S. 87, 
Amsterdam Ave. 
and 77th St. 


Economics 

Industrial conditions (local) 

Law 

Office practice 

Salesmanship 






P. S. 9, 


Statistics 






225 W. 82d St. 


Stenography 






P. S. 66, 


Typing- 






421 E. 88th St. 








P. S. 117, 








170 E. 77th St. 








P. S. 96, 








Avenue A and 








81st St. 








P. S. 179, 








140 W. 102nd 








St. 








Katharine Gibbs 
School 


Accounting 
Advertising- 
Banking 


H. S., college, or 
e q u i va lent 
education 


Average 8 mos. 


101 Park Ave. 


Correspondence 

Economics 

English 

Piling and indexing 

Insurance 

Investments 

Law 

Office practice and systems 

Personnel Management 

Psychology (business) 

Stenography 

Typing 






•Merchants and 
Bankers Husi- 
ness School 

Madison Avenue 


Commercial 
Accounting 
Bookkeeping 
Business administration 
English 
Office appliances 


Elementary 
school gradu- 
ates 


Average 9 mos. 


and 58th St. 


Secretarial 

Stenography 
Typing 






Miller School 

131 E. 23rd St. 


Bookkeeping- 
Office practice 
Typing 


Elementary 
school grad- 
uates 


Average 8 mos. 




Stenography 


H. S. graduates 
preferred 




Morris Evening 
High School 

Boston Road 
and 166th St. 


Bookkeeping 
Law 

Stenography 
Typing 


Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 


3 yrs. 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 1 Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept.-June 


S:40 a. m.- 
2:45 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 




Students A 1 d 
Fund 

Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
system 


Sept. -May 


9 a. 1T1.-3 p. m. 


Female 


$200-$300. 






Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 

7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


$17-$20 per mo. 

$125-$150 
per course 


Several 




Open all yr. 


9:30 a. m.- 
3 p. m. 

7 p. ni.-9 p. m. 
Mon., Wed., 
Fri. 


Male 
Female 


$6 per mo. 

$18 per mo. 

Books and sup- 
plies extra 






Sept.-June 


7:30 p. m.- 
10:10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 







13 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



]\ame 


CottrsoM 


Atliuisslou 


Leug;th of 






Kequirements 


Course 


Morris High 


Accounting 


Elementary 


4 yrs. 


School 


Arithmetic 


S C ll O 1 01' 




Boston Road 


Booklveeping 
Civics 


equivalent ed- 
ucation 




and 166th St. 


Office training 

Salesmanship 

Stenography 

Transportation 

Typing 








Secretarial Course 




6 mos. 




(post-graduate) 






New Lots Evening 


Arithmetic 


Elementary 


3 yrs. 


High School 


Bookkeeping 


school or 




Sutter Avenue, 


Stenography 
Typing 


equivalent ed- 
ucation 




Vermont and 






Wyona Streets, 








Brooklyn 








New Utrecht High 


Arithmetic 


Elementary 


3-4 yrs. 


School 


BooI<keeping 


school or 




86th St. near 


Stenography 
Typing 


equivalent ed- 
ucation 




18 th Avenue, 








Brooklyn 








New York Edison 


Accountancy course 


Employed by 


3 yrs. 


Co. 


Bookkeeping 


Co. or by 






Principles of accounting 


United Elec- 


Reg. and special 


Stuyvesant 


Public service problems 


tric Liglit & 


courses aver- 


Correspondence 


Power Co., 


aging VA hrs. 


Place and 15th 


Electric cooking and heating 


New York & 


per week 


St. 


apparatus 


Queens Elec- 






Psychology (business) 


tric Light & 
Power Co., or 






Publicity 


Consolidated 






Advertising 


Gas Co. 






Editorial work 








Signs (electric) 








Salesmanship 








Telephone operating 






New York School 


Application of Filing 


Age 17-35 


1 mo. 


of Filing Methods to 
* Banking 






P. S. education 




1170 Broadway 


Brokerage 

Insurance 

Law 

Mail Order 

Manufacturing 

Real Estate 

Sales 
Card indexing 
Systems 

Alphabetic 

Geographic 

Numeric 

Subject 
Transferring 
Typing 







14 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Pees 


Scliolarships 


Remarks 


Sept.-June 


S:05 a. m.- 
1:20 p. m., or 
1 p. m.- 
5:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 

Female 


Free 




Placement 
bureau 


Sept.-June 


7:10 p. m.- 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


8:40 a. m.- 
4 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 






Oct.-May 


Day and eve- 
ning 


Male 
Female 


Free 


1 for gradu- 
ate of Ac- 
counting 
School 


Vocational 
guidance 


Open all yr. 


10 a. m.-3 p. m. 
6 p. m.- 
8:45 p. m. 


Female 


$30 







15 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Name 




Admission 


l^engtU ot 






Requirements 


Course 


Packard Conuiier- 


(""ommercial Course 


Elementary 


10-12 mos. 


cial School 




school or 
equivalent ed- 




Lexington Ave. 




ucation 




and 35th St. 


Secretarial Course 


High School 
education 


6-12 mos. 




Stenographic Course 


Good knowledge 
of English 


7 mos. 




Typing- (alone) 




4 wks. 


Public School 4 


Aritlimetic 


Elementary 


1 yr. 




Bookkeeping- 


school gradu- 




Rivington and 


Business En£;lish 


ate 




Ridge Sts. 


Stenography 
Typewriting- 






Public School No. 


Eng-lish 


No restrictions 


Dependent o n 


42 (Evening) 


Mathematics 




course and on 
individual 


Washington 


Stenography 






Ave. and Clare- 








mont Parkway, 


Typing 






Bronx 








S e w a !• <1 Park 


Bookkeeping- 


Elementary 


3 yrs. 


Evening High 
and Trade 
School for Men 


Stenography 
Typing 


school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 




and AVonien 








Hester, Essex 








and Norfollt Sts. 








Theodore Koose- 


Accountancy 


Elementary 


1-4 yrs. 


velt High School 


Bookkeeping 

English 

History 


school grad- 
uate 




Mott Ave. and 


Languages 






144th St. 


Elective subjects 
Secretarial 
Bookkeeping" 
Englisli 
History 
Languages 
Office practice 
Stenography 
Typewriting- 
Elective subjects 







W a s h i 11 g t o n 
Heights Even- 
ing High School 

521 W. 145th 
St. 



Advertising 

Arithmetic 

Bookkeeping 

Civics 

Law 

Office training 

Salesmanship 

Stenography 

Typing 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



3 yrs. 



IG 



Term 


liuurs 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


It«?m:irk.->i 


Sept. -June 


Day. 9 a. m.- 
3 p. ni. 

Eve. 7:30 p. m.- 

9:30 p. in. 

M o n., Wed., 

Fri. 


Male 
Female 


$50 per 10 wks. 

$1S per 10 wks. 
$50 per 10 wks. 
$12 per 4 wks. 






Sept. -June 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 


Female 


Free 






Sept. -June 


7:45 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Female 


Free 






Sept. -June 


S a. m.-l p. m. 

1 p. m.- 
5:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 








Sept.-June 


S a. m.-lO p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 
Female 


Free 







I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Admission 
Requirements 



LcnprtU of 
Course 



Washington 
Irving High 
School 

40 Irving Place 



Wood's Business 
School 

Fifth Ave. and 
125th St. 



Bookkeeping Course 

Bookkeeping' 

Community Civics 

Domestic Art 

Domestic Science 

Drawing 

Elocution 

English 

History 

Languages 

Music 

Physiology 

Stenograpliy 

Elective subjects 
Stenography Course 

Bookkeeping 

Community Civics 

Domestic Art 

Domestic Science 

Drawing 

Elocution 

English 

History 

Languages 

Music 

Office practice 

Physiology 

Stenography 

Typing 
Elective subjects 



Elementary 
school grad- 
uate 



4 yrs. 



Secretarial Training 

Stenography 

Typing 
Stenographic Course 



English 



Dependent on 
course and on 
ability of in- 
dividual 



Young Men's 
Christian Asso- 
ciation, Brook- 
lyn Branch 

55 Hanson Place 



Accountancy Institute 

Accounting 

Auditing 

Economics 

Finance 

Law 

Organization 
Commercial 

Bookkeeping 

Business preparatory 

Foremanship 

Mathematics 

Salesmanship 

Secretarial 

English 

Stenography 

Typing 

Spanish 



For Diploma; 
H. S. Grad. or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 

Special students 
admitted 



3 yrs. 



IS 



Sept. -June 



Open all yr. 



Hours 



8 a. m.-l p. m. 
1 p. m.- 
5:30 p. m. 



Tuition and Fees 



Female 



Day 

9 a. m.-3 p. m. 

Evening- 
7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon., Tues., 

Thurs. 



Scholarships 



Male 
Female 



Open all yr. 



7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 



Male 



Day 

$82-$156 

Evening- 

$6 per mo. 
$19 per 4 mos. 

in advance 
$40 per year 

(installments) 



Remarks 



$90 per year 

Books and sup- 
plies extra 



$40 
$20 

$45 



Individual 
instruction 



19 



I. COMMERCIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 


Ijensth of 






Keqtiirements 


Course 


Young Men's 


Accountancy Institute 


H. S. graduate 


37 -svks. 


Christian Asso- 


Accounting- 
Auditing- 


or equivalent 
education, or 




ciation, 23(1 St. 


Economics 


practical ex- 




Branch 


Law 


perience 




215 W. 23 rd St. 


Commercial 


Approval of di- 


.36 vi^ks. 




Advertising 


rector 






Banlving 








Bookkeeping 








Correspondence 








English 








French 








Merchandising 








Office practice 








Public speaking 








Salesmanship 








Spanish 








Stenography 






' 


Typing 






Youn.i? Women's 


Advertising 


Member of 


Dependent on 


Christian As,«o- 


Comptometer 


Y. W. C. A. 


individual 


ciation, Brook- 


English 


1 yr. H. S. 




lyn Branch 


French 








Public speaking 


No restrictions 
for special 
courses 




2 7 6 Scherraer- 


Spanish 




horn St., B'klyn 


Stenography 








Typing 


H. S. Graduate 






Secretarial coiirse 








English 








Stenography 








Typing- 






Vouns Women's 


Arithmetic 


For Day School: 


11 mos. 


Hebrew Associ- 


Bookkeeping 


Elementary 
school educa- 




ation 


Civics 
Dictaphone 


tion; exam. 




31 W. 110th St. 


English 


For Evening 


Dependent on 






School: Age 


individual 




Piling 


17, exam. 






P.rench 








Office training 


Member of 
Y. W. H. A. 






Penmanship 








Spanish 








Stenography 








Telephone switcliboard 








Typing- 







Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition ami Fees 


Scliolarsblps 


Remark.s 


Sept. -June 
Sept. -June 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 


$60.00 

Materials and 
supplies extra 

Dependent on 
subject 




Price includes 
one year's 
membership 
in y. M. C. A. 


Open all yr. 


9 a. m.- 
2:30 p. m. 
7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Day, $14 per mo. 
Kve., $6 per mo. 




Placement bu- 
reau 


Open all yr. 

1 


9 a. m.-3 p. m. 

8 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 


Female 


$60 

Special classes 
$1-$10 

i 


1 coverin,£? 
tuition 

S of $150 each 
/ 


Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
system 

172 sirls, agro 
18-25, may 
board in 
Home, $3-$ll 

per week. 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Reciuirenients 


Len^h of 
Course 


xlrt Evening Trade 


Clay modelling- 


Dependent on 


Dependent on 


School 


Costume design 
Interior decorating 


course 


course 


Public School 


Jewelry design 






27 


Mural design 






202-214 East 








42nd St. 








Ballard School 


Design 


Member of 


Dependent on 




Commercial 


Y. W. C. A. 


course 


Y. W. C. A. 
(Central Branch) 


Costume 
Poster 
Dressmaking 






610 Lexington 


Pattern drafting 
Pattern making 






Ave. 


Sewing 
Embroidery 
Millinery 

Nursing (pi-actical) 
Tea room, cafeteria and lunch- 
room managem.ent 






Baron de Hirsch 


Automotive mechanics 


Age 16 


5% mo3. 


Trade School 


Carpentry 


Speak, read and 




222 East 64th 


Drawing 

Mechanical 


write English 




St. 


Electricity 


Approval of su- 






Machine operating 


perintendent 






Machine shop work 








Mathematics 








Painting 








House 








Sign 








Plumbing 








Printing 








Sheet metal work 






Bay Kidge High 


Design 


Elementary 


1-4 yrs. 


School 


CoiTimercial 


school or 






Drawing 


equivalent ed- 




Fourth Avenue 
and 67th Street, 
Brooklyn 


Freehand 
Mechanical 

IDressmaking 

Millinery 


ucation 






Nursing 






Blind Men's Work- 


Broom malting 


Blind 


Dependent on 


shop 


Chair making- 
Mop making- 


Age over 21 


individual 


338 E. 35th St. 








(N. Y. Ass'n for 








Blind) 









Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scliolarsliips 


Remarks 


fPt.-May 


7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Two evenings 
a week 


Male 
Female 


Free 






pt.-June 

mmer 
issions 
^ne-July 


9:30 a. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


$15 to $50 
$75 to $100 




Tuition free in 
exception al 
cases 

Student A 1 d 
Fund 

Employment 
bureau 


ig-.-Feb. 
b.-JuIy 


8:30 a. m.- 
4 p. m. 


Male 


Free 




Applicants 
must have 
sufficient 
means of 
support t o 
enable them 
to remain 
the full 
term 


pt.-June 


8:35 a. m.- 
3 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 




Vocational ad- 
viser 


>en all yr. 


8 a. m.-5 p. m. 

Saturdays 

8 a. m .-1 p. m. 


Male 


Free 




Appre ntic es 
paid $6 per 
week and 
luncheon; 
after train- 
ing, $7-$30 as 
piece work- 
ers 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 






Name 




A<lini.>4sioii 


Length of 






Reqiiii-eiiiciii.s 


Course 


Blind Women's 


Basketi-y 


Blind 


Dependent on 


AVork Shop 


Cooking- 
Crocheting 


Age 16-50 


individual 


111 E. 59th St. 


Knitting- 






(N. Y. Ass'n 


Macliine operating- 






for Blind) 








Bronx Evening 


Design 


Elementary 


2-4 yrs. 


High School for 


Commercial 
Costume 


school or 
equivalent ed- 




Women 


Textile 
Dra-wing 


ucation 




Prospect Ave. 


Freehand 






and Jennings 


Dressmaking 






Street 


Embroidery 

Millinery- 






Brooklyn Evening 


Drawing 


Elementary 


3 yrs. : 


High School 


Architectural 
Freehand 


school or 
equivalent ed- 






Mechanical 


ucation 




Putnam and 








Marcy Aves. 








Brooklyn Evening 


Administration (shop) 


Elementary 


1-3 yrs. 1 


Technical and 
Trade School 


Automobile mechanics 
Cabinet making 
Carpentry and joinery 


school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 




Seventh Avenue 


Chemistry (industrial) 


Employed in 




and Fourth St. 


Design 

Ship 
Dra-wing 

Architectural 

Mechanical 
Dressmaking (trade) 
Electricity installation and 

-wiring 
Engineering 

Civil 

Electrical 

Mechanical 

Steam 
Gas engine mechanics 
Machine shop -work 
Mathematics (shop) 
Millinery (trade) 
Nursing (practical) 
Pattern making 
Plan reading and estimating 
Plumbing 
Printing- 
Composition 

Imposition 

Linotype operating 

Press work 

Proofreading- 
Typesetting 
Sheet metal wo7-k 


trade du ring- 
day 






24 







Term 



Sex 



Tuition and Fees 



Scholar sliips 



lleniarks 



Open all yr. 



8:45 a. m.- 
5 p. m. 
Saturdays 
9 a. m.- 
12:30 p. m. 



Female 



Free 



Paid on time 
basis for sal- 
able work 

Pupils placed 
in school 
work shops 



Sept. -June 



7:45 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Female 



Free 



Sept.-June 



7:25 p. m.- 
10:15 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Male 



Free 



Sept.-May 



7:45 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 

Mon. and Wed. 
or Tues. and 
Thurs. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



25 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Brooklyn V o c a - 
tional School 
for Boys 

Jay and Nassau 
Sts., Brooklyn 



Bushwlck Evening 
Trade School 

400 Irving Ave., 
Brooklyn 



Automobile repair 
Drawing- 
Architectural 
Mechanical 
Electricity 
Installation 
Wiring- 
Machine shop work 
Sheet metal work 
Show cutting and fitting- 
Shoe inachine operating 
Wood working 



Admission 
Requirements 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



Lenj^'th of 
Course 



Bushwick 

School 



H i a h 



Irving Avenue 
and Madison 
St., Brooklyn 



Automobile mechanics 
Cabinet making 
Design 

Machine 

Sheet metal 

Ship 
Drawing- 
Architectural 

Mechanical 
Dressmaking- (trade) 
Electricity 

Installation 

Wiring- 
Forging 

Gas engine mechanics 
Illustration 

Commercial 
Machine shop work 
Mathematics (trade) 
Pattern making 
Plan reading and estimatinf 
Pluinbing 
Printing 

Linotype operating 

Presswork 

Typesetting- 
Radio work 
Sheet metal work 
Tool making 



Drawing- 
Mechanical 

INIanual training- 
Technical courses 

Mathematics 

Pliysics 

Preparation for Higher 
Training in 
Architecture 
Chemistry 
Engineering 

Special work in woods and 
metals 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 

Employed dur- 
ing day 



1-3 yrs. 



Elementary 
school gradu- 
ate or equiva- 
lent education 



4 yrs. 



26 



Term 



Sept. -June 



9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Male 



Tuition and Fees 



Free 



Scbolarsliips 



Sept.-May 



7:30-9:30 p. m. 
Mon. and Wed. 

or Tues. and 

Thurs. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



Remarks 



Placement bu- 
reau and fol- 
low-up sys- 
tem 



Sept. -June 



8 a. m.-5 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



27 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Coiirses 



Admission 
Requirements 



Lienisrtli of 
Course 



Central Evening 
High School for 
Women 

Nostrand Ave. 
and Halsey St., 
Brooklyn 



Design 

Costume 
Dressmaking' 
Millinery 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



3-4 yrs. 



Clara de Hirsch 
Home for Work- 
ing Girls 



225 
St. 



East 63d 



Dressmaking 

Millinery 

Sewing 
Hand 
Machine 



Age 14 



6 mos.-2 yrs., 
dependent on 
course and on 
individual 



Cooper Union for 
the Advance- 
ment of Science 
and Art 

Fourth Ave. and 
8th St. 



Day School 
Chemistry 
Engineering 
Civil 

Evening School 
Chemistry 

General science and elec- 
trical engineering- 
Technical 

Concrete construction 
Design 

Motor vehicle 
Ship and yacht 
Drawing, mechanical 
Steam engine practice 
Strength' of materials 



Age 16 

Exams in al- 
gebra, E n g - 
lish, plane 
geometry and 
history 



4 yrs. 



6 yrs. 



5 yrs. 

1 yr. each 



Crippled Chil- 
dren's East Side 
Free School 

157 Henry St. 



Copper work 
Embroidery 
Sewing (fine) 
Sign painting 



Crippled 
Age 14 
Working papers 



Dependent o n 
individual 



Eastern Evening 
High School for 
Men 

P. S. 122, Har- 
rison Ave. and 
Heyward St., 
Brooklyn 



Design 

Commercial 

Drawing 

Architectural 

Freehand 

Mechanical 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



3 yrs. 



2S 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


SchularshliiiK 


Remarks 


jt.-June 


7:30 p. m.- 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Female 


Free 




Placement 
committee 


t.-July 


9 a. m.- 
5:30 p. m. 


Female 


$2 per month 
Free to pupils 
unable to pay 


40 


Pupils in need 
may live 
free while 
training 

Board rate 
based on 
wag-es 

Maximum $7 
per weeli 


;.1-Mayl5 


9:45 a. m.- 
4:30 p. m. 

7:30 a. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 

Expenses for 
books, labora- 
tory fees, etc. 






»t.-July 


9 a. m.-5 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 




Placed 
through In- 
stitute for 
Crippled and 
Disable d 
Men 

Follow-up 
work by so- 
cial investi- 
gators 

Girls placed 
in School's 
workshops 


it. -June 

! 
J 


7:10 p. m.- 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 







29 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 






INaine 


Courses 


Admis.slon 


L,engrth of 






Hcquirement.<i 


Course 


Erasmus Hall 


Drawing 


Elementary 


4 yrs. 


High School 


Mechanical 


school or 
equivalent ed- 




Flatbush and 




ucation 




Church Aves., 








Brooklyn 








Haaren High 


Drawing 


Elementary 


3-4 yrs. 


School 


Mechanical 


school or 






Electricity 


equivalent ed- 




Hubert and Col- 


Machine shop work 


ucation, o r 
transfer from 




lister Sts. 


Steam plant work 


another H. S. 




Annex: Haaren 








H. S. Industrial 








Annex, at the 








Manual Train- 








i n g High 








School, Brook- 








lyn 








Harlem Evening 


Automobile repair 


Age 18 


Dependent o n 


Trade School 


Cabinet making 


Employed in 


course and on 
Individual 




Carpentry 


trade applied 




Fifth Ave. and 


Design 


for 


1-4 yrs. 


138th St. 


Sheet metal 








Structural steel 


Physical quali- 






Drawing 


fications 






Architectural 








Commercial 








Freehand 








Mechanical 








Electricity 








Installation 








Engineering 








Gas engine 








Steam 








Forging 








House construction 








Machine shop work 








Oxy-acetylene welding 








Plan reading and estimating 








Plumbing 








Printing 








Composition 








Cylinder press work 








Flatbed press work 








Imposition press work 








Linotype operating 








Monotype 








Radio 








Sheet metal work 








Telegraphy 








Telephony 








Tool making 








30 




1 



Term 



Sept. -June 



Sept.-June 



Sept.-May 



8:30 a. m.- 
2:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 



9 a. m.-3 p. m. 



7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Mon., Tues., 
Wed., Thurs. 



Male 
Female 



Male 



Male 



Tuition and Fees 



Free 



Free 



Scholarsliips 



Rcmarlis 



Free 



Alternate 
weeks in 
b u sine s s 
house for 
part of 
course 

Pupils paid 
market rate 
while em- 
ployed 

Placements, 
supervision 
i n business 
and report 
of progress 
by "Co-ordi- 
nators" of 
School 



31 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Hebi-ew Technical 
Institute 

Stuyvesant and 
9th Sts. 



Hebrew Technical 
School for Girls 

240 Second Ave. 



Institute for Crip- 
pled and Dis- 
abled Men 

101 E. 23rd St. 



Italian Even- 
ing School 

154 Hester St. 

(Children's Aid 
Society School) 



t'oiirsee 



engineering- 



Day School 

Automotive 

Chemistry 

Drawing- 
Freehand 
Mechanical 

Electricity 

Engineering 

Forging 

Instrument making 

Machine shop work 

Mathematics 
Algebra 
Geometry 
Mensuration 
Trigonometry 

Metal -working 

Pattern making 

Physics 

Science (lectures) 

Wood carving- 
Wood -working- 
Evening School 

Automotive engineering 

Drawing- 
Freehand 
Mechanical 

Cabinet making 

Die making 

Instrument making 

Machine shop work 

Pattern making 

Tool making 



Design (costume) 

Dressmaking 

Embroidery 

Millinery 

Sewing 



Drawing (mechanical) 

Jewelry making 

Motion picture projection 

Oxy-acetylene welding 

Printing 

Monotype operating 

Press feeding 

Telephone switchboard operat- 
ing 

Repairing 

Clock and watch 
Typewriter 



Dressmaking 
Machine operating 
Printing 
Sign Painting 
Sewing 



-VdiMl'^.'fioii 
Requirements 



Age 14 

Report of last 
6 months from 
last school at- 
tended 

Exams in arith- 
m e t i c, Eng- 
lish, geogra- 
P h y , history 
(U. S.) 



rpiiSth of 
Course 



3 yrs. 



Age 19 

Employed in 
trade during 
day 



2 yrs. 



Age 14 

Elementary 
school diplo- 
ma 

Entrance and 
physical ex- 
ams. 



Physical handi- 
cap 

Approval of in- 
stitute 



Age 15 
Working papers 



S mos. 



Dependent on 
course chosen 
and on Indi- 
vidual 



1-3 yrs. 















Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuitlou and Fees 


ScliolarshiitM 


lieiuurlvis 


Sept.-June 


9 a. m.- 1 p. m. 


Male 


Free 




Students A i d 
Fund 

Maintains 
place- 
ment bureau 
and follow- 
up system 


Sept.-May 


7:30 p. m.- 




Free 






Mon., Tues., 


9:30 p. m. 










Thurs. 






$2.50 per month 
for supplies 

Pupils furnish 
kits and instru- 
ments 






Open all yr. 


8:45 a. m.- 
4 p. m. 


Female 


Free 

$18-$25 for books 
and materials 




Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
follow - up 
system 


Open all yr. 


8:30 a. m.- 
4:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 




Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
sj'stem 


Sept. June 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 


For painting 


Maintains den- 
tal clinics, 
health c e n - 
ter, open air 
classes, 












pi a cem e nt 










bureaus and 












follow- 












up system 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admfasion 
Requirements 


Length of 
Course 


Manhattan Even- 


Batik and dyeing- 


Age 16 


Courses divided 
in units of 10 
lessons each 


ing Trade 


Costume design and draping 


Employed in 


School 


Embroidery 


trade during 






Design 


day 




129 E. 22nd St. 


Handworl<; 

Pattern perforating- 
Feather making 
Flower making 
Interior decoration 
Lamp shade making 
Lunchroom work 

Cooking 
Machine operating 

Bonnaz 

Embroidery (Singer) 

Garment 

Hemstitching 

Straw hat 
Manicuring and shampooing 
Millinery 
Novelty making 
Pattern drafting 

Dresses 
Tailoring 
Textiles 

Dyes 

Materials 

Weaves 






Manhattan Trade 


Dressmaking 


Eligibility for 


1-2 yrs. 


School for Girls 


Feather making 


working pa- 
pers 






Flower making 




129 E. 22nd St. 


Lampshade making 


Elementary 






Laundry work 


school gradu- 






Machine operating 


ates preferred 






Embroidery 








Garment 








Kid Gloves 








Straw hat 








Manicuring and shampooing 








Millinery 








Novelty work 








Sample mounting 








Lunch room work — Cooking 








Textiles 






Manual Training 


Drawing 


Elementary 


4 yrs. 


High School 


Mechanical 
Mathematics 


school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 




Ninth Ave. and 


Physics 






4th St., Bklyn. 


Shop work 







34 



Term 



Sept.-May 



Open all yr. 
except 
Aug'. 



Sept.-June 



Hours 



7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon. and Wed. 
or Tues. and 
Thurs. 



9 a. m.-4 p. m. 



8 a. m.- 
5:15 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Female 



Female 



Male 



Tuition and Fees Scholarships 



Free 



Free 



Free 



Student 
Fund 



Aid 



Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
system 



Several 



Remarks 



.35 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Njime 


Courses 


Aflmissiou 


Ii«?nf!rth of 






Ueiiuirement.s 


<-'our.se 


McDowell Dress- 


Dressmaking- 


Age 14 


Dependent o n 


making and 


Cutting 




individual 


Millinery School 


Designing 
Drafting 


Elementary 
school gradu- 


Average time, 6 


25 West 35th 


Draping 
Finishing 


ate 


mos. 


St. 


Sewing 

Tailoring 

Trimming 








Millinery- 




10 wks. or less 




American and French 








Coloring flo-wers 








Design 








Feather cleaning, curling 








and steaming 








Making fabric frame straw 








ornaments 








Treatment 








Trimming 






Mechanics 


Design 


Age 16 


3 yrs. 


Institute 


Decorative 
Poster 


Employed dur- 






Ship 


ing day 




20 W. 44th St. 


Drawing 

/\ rcliitectural 

Freehand 

]\Iechanical 

Topographical 
Electricity (industrial) 
Mathematics 

Business 

Technical 

Trade 
Physics (elementary) with 

laboratory work 
Plan reading and estimating 






Murray Hill Even- 


Advertising mechanics 


Age 14 


1-3 yrs. 


ing Trade School 


Automobile mechanics 
Carpentry 


Employed dur- 
ing da y in 


Dependent o n 
course chosen 


237 E. 37th St. 


Cabinet making- 
Joinery 


trade applied 


and on indi- 




for 


vidual 




Drawing 








Architectural 








Mechanical 








Electricity 








Installation 








Maintenance 








Municipal theory 








Wiring 








Engineering 








Electric 








Garment design 








Machine shop 








Theory 








Management 








Building 








Real estate 








Mathematics (trade) 








Painting (trade) 








Show card 








Signs 








Photography (commercial) 








Plan reading and estimating 








Plumbing 








Printing 








Automatic press work 








Photo-lithography 








lanoty.pe operating 






C'ffset litho press work 






Typeselthie; 







;:(■) 



Open all yr. 



Sept. -April 



vSept.-May 



Hours 



Daily 

9 a. m.-3 p. m. 

Evening- 
7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Tues., Thurs. 



10 a. ni.-4 p. m. 

Special a r- 
r angements 
for pupils 
unable to at- 
tend regular 
classes 



7:25 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon. and Wed. 

or Tues. and 

Thurs. 



7:.''.0 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Men. and Wed. 

or Tues. and 

Thurs. 



Female 



Male 



Male 



Tuition nnd Fees 



$30-$45 

$4 per week or 
$14 for 4 weeks 



$75, or at the rate 
of $5 applica- 
tion fee, and $10 
per week 



Free 

Books and instru- 
ments extra, at 
normal price in 
supply room 



Free 



Scholarships 



Under consid- 
eration 



Special prizes 



Materials fur- 
nished both 
courses, or 
pupils may 
furnish own 
materials 



Alumni em- 
ployment bu- 
reau 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 



Courses 



Admisisioii 
Requirements 



Liength of 
Course 



Murray Hill Voca- 
tional School 

237 E. 37th St. 



Automobile mechanics 
Desig-n 

Poster 
Dra-vsring 

Freehand 

Mechanical 
Electricity 

Installation 

Wiring- 
Machine shop work 
Plumbing- 
Printing- and press -work 
Sheet metal -work 
Sign painting 
Wood -working 



Age 14 

Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 

Exams, in arith- 
metic, English 



2 yrs. 



Navigation, M a - 
rine Engineer- 
ing and Radio 
School of the 
Seamen's Church 
Institute 

25 South St. 



Marine engineering 
Navigation 

Radio 

Training for masters and mates 



No restrictions 



2 yrs. deck ser- 
vice 

Age 19 for li- 
cense 



Dependent o n 
individual 



About 7 mos. 



Needlecraft 
School 

218 E. 16th St. 



Children's Dresses 
Sewing 

Hand 

Machine 



16 yrs. old o: 
have -working 
papers 



New Lots Evening 
High School 

Sutter Avenue, 
Vermont, and 
Wyona Streets, 
Brooklyn 



Design 

Commercial 
Dra-wing 

Architectural 

Freehand 

Mechanical 
Dressmaking 
Millinery 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed 
ucation 



New York 
School 



Auto 



302 E. 14th St. 



Automobile mechanics 
Chauffeur's work 
Repairing 



Age over 18 
Physical fitness 



Dependent on 
individual 



3 yrs. 



2 yrs. 



4 wks. or less 



.•^8 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarship.s 


Remarks 


Sept.-Aug-. 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 


Male 


Free 




Placement bu- 
reau and fol- 
low-up sys- 
tem 


Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
Sat. 9 a. m.- 
12 m. 

7 p. m.-lO p. m. 
Mon., Wed., 
Fri. 


Male 


$25 

$15 

$75 (masters) 

$50 (for chief, 

2nd and 3rd 

mates) 




Individual In- 
struction 

Free clinic 


Open all yr. 


8 a. m. to 
5:30 p. m. 

Full time and 
part time 
sessions 

Sat. 8 a. m. to 
1 p. m. 


Female 


Free 




Students paid 
while learn- 
ing- 10(J per 
hr. or $9 for 
full time, in- 
crease for 
proficiency 

Students 
placed in 
school work- 
shop 


Sept.-June 


7 p. m.-9 p. m. 
10 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Open all yr. 


10 a. m.-12 m. 
1 p. m.-3 p. m. 
7-9 p. m. 

(2 hrs. consti- 
tute 1 les- 
son) 


Male 
Female 

i 


$35 




Occasional re- 
ductions i n 
price for spe- 
cial pupils 



39 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 


Leng-th of 






Ki^Jliiiremeiits 


Cour.^e 


\ew York Edison 


Electricity (installation) 


Employed by 


3 yrs. 


Company 


Machine shop work 


Company o r 
by United 


Reg. and special 
courses aver- 






Electric Light 


aging 1% hrs. 


14 W. 27th St. 




& Power Co., 
New York & 
Queens Elec- 
tric Light & 
Power Co. or 
C n s 1 i - 
dated Gas Co. 


per week 




Technical 




25 wks. 


Apparatus and illuminating 






power 






Installation 








Laboratory practice organ- 








ization 








Substation 








Operating 






New York Elec- 


Electricity 


Age 16-60 


Day, about 6 


trical School 


Automotive mechanics 
Battery systems 




months 


39 West 17th 


Control equipment 
Drafting 




Eve., about 12 
mos. 


St. 


Estimating and contracting 

Installation and wiring 

Machine shop work 

Repair 
Telegraphy 
Telephony 






New York Insti- 


Motion Picture Course 


Interest in sub- 


3-8 mos., depen- 


tute of Photog- 


Animated cartooning 


ject 


dent on daily 


raphy 


Cranking 




attendance 


Developing 

Film 

Lenses 






141 West 36th 






St., N. Y. C. 


Motion picture camera 






505 State St., 


Panoraming and tilting 
Shutter and automatic dis- 






Brooklyn 


solve 
Splicing 
Text book 
Title practice 
Tricks 
Photography 
Chemistry 
Commercial 
Developing 
Enlarging 
Framing 
Lantern slides 
Lighting 
Mechanics 
Mounting 
Physics 
Portraiture 
Posing 
Printing 
Salesmanship 







40 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Soholar.siiips 


Remarks 


Oct. -May 


Day and Eve. 


Male 
Female 


Free 


1 for graduate 
of Account- 
ing- School 


1 

Vocational 
Guidance 


Oct. -April 


5 evenings per 
weel< 


Male 






Prizes 


Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 

7 p. m.-9 p. ni. 
Mon., Tues., 
Wed., Thurs. 


Male 


$190 per year 

Materials about 
$19 extra 






Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-9 p. m. 


Male 


$160 in advance 




Evening class- 




except Sat. 




or $185 in in- 




es are given 




Wed. eve. and 


Female 


stallments 




daylight 




holidaj's 








practice first 
Sunday each 
month 

Instruction is 
almost en- 
tirely indi- 
vidual 



41 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Cour.ses 


Admission 


Lengrth of 






Requirements 


Course 


New York Trade 


Day School 


16-25 yrs. 


105 hours 


School 


Automotive mechanics 




14 weeks 




Electricity 




6-18 months 


First Aye. and 
67th St. 


Evening- School 

Automotive mechanics 


17-25 yrs. 


Dependent o n 


Bricklaying 


Read, speak and 


course chosen 




Electricity 


write English 


and on indi- 




Painting (trade) 




vidual 




House 








Plain decorating- 








Sign 








Pattern drafting 








Pattern malting 








Plumbing 








Printing 








Sheet metal work 








Steam and hot water fitting 






Pan -American 


Surveying 


Interest in sub- 


Day, about 4 


Electrical So- 


Drawing 


ject and ap- 


mos. 


ciety, Inc. 


Field practice 


titude for 




Highway and railroad 


mathematics 


Eve., about 7 




Hydrographical 




mos. 


3 9 West l-7th 


Line and grade 


No age limit 




St. 


Pier and dock 
Plan reading 
Semiphore signaling 

Solar obsei-vations 






Puglisi School 


Designing for Dressmaking 


P. S. graduate 


About 5 mos. 




Cutting 




dependent o n 


231 E. 14th St. 


Designing- 
Sketching 




individual 


Piatt Institute 


Dress Design 


Thorough 
knoAvledg*e of 


1 yr. 


215 Ryerson St., 




dressmaking- 




Brooklyn, N. Y. 


Dressmaking (Trade) 


Age 17 
Know^ledge o f 




School of House- 




sewing and 




h 1 d Science 




elementa- 




and Arts 




ry dressmak- 
ing 






Hospital Dietetics 


Age 23 

High School 
graduate 


2 yrs. 




Institutional Household Science 


.\ge 25 


1 yr. 




Homemakers 


Good general 


1 yr. 




Short Courses 


education 


3 mos. to 1 yr. 




Day 








Care of House 








Cookery 








Dressmaking 








House Furnishing 








Household Adm. 








Laundry Work 








Millinery 








Sewing 








Short Courses 




3-6 mos. 




Evening 








*Cookery 








Dressmaking 








Laundry Worlv 








•■■Millinery 








Pattern Drafting and 








Draping 








♦Serving 








Sewing 








*Men admitted to classes 





42 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


IScSioIarsJiiys 


Remarks 


Sept.-April 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
Sat. 9 a. m.- 
12 m. 

7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon., Wed., 
Fri. 


Male 


$40 
$60 

$8-$20 per term 
of 6 months 






Open all yr. 


9:30 a. m.- 

4 p. m. 

7 p. m.-9 p. m. 

Sat. aft. in 
field 


Male 


$190 






Open all yr. 


10 a. m.-4 p. m. 
5 p. m.-9 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


$100 






Sept. -June 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
except Sat. 

10 a. m.-l p. m. 
except Sat. 

2 t w - h o 11 r 
lessons 
weekly 


Female 


$30-$50 per term 
of 3 mos. ac- 
cording- to 
course 

$7-$30 per term 
of 3 mos. 








7:30 p. m.- 


Male 


$7-$10 per term 








9:30 p. m. 




of 3 mos. 








Mon., Tues., 


Female 










Thurs. 











II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



IVame 


t'otir.se.s 


A<lMii,ssion 


LeuetSi of 






Ilcijuireuieiits 


Cour.se 


Pratt Institute 


Day School 


Age 18 


2 yrs. 




Eng-ineering- 


H. S. education 




School of Science 


Chemical 


or equivalent 




and Technology 


Electrical 
Industrial 


in industrial 
experience 






Mechanical 


General fitness 




215 Ryerson St., 


Machine construction 


for subject 


1 yr. 


Brooklyn 


Machine shop work 








Evening- School 


Age 18 


3-6 mos. a r - 




Automotive repair 


Employed dur- 


ranged in pe- 




Carpentry 


ing day 


riods to meet 




Design 


General fitness 


requirements 




Machine 


for subject 






Structural 








Drawing 








Mechanical 








Electricity 








Industrial 








Practical 








Forging 








Machine shop work 








Materials 








Mathematics 








Pattern making- 








Physics 








Industrial 








Power plant operation 








Steam engine operation 






Public School 42 


Machine shop work 


No restrictions 


Dependent o n 


(Evening) 


Printing- 




course and on 
individual 


Washington 








Ave. and Clare- 








mont Parkway, 








Bronx 








Public School 95, 


Electric wiring 


Employed i n 


1 yr. 


Evening Trade 


Machine shop work 


trade chosen 


1 yr. 


School 


Plumbing 




1 yr. 




Sheet metal work 




1 yr. 


16 Clarkson St. 








Public School 5 


Electrical Installation 


Dependent on 


Dependent on 


(EA^ening) 


Printing- and Press work 
Sheet Metal 


course 


course 


T i I la r y and 


Shoe li-idustry 






Bridge Streets, 


Binding 






Brooklyn 


Finishing 
Packing 






Public School 67 


Auto repair 


Dependent on 


Dependent on 


(Evening) 


raiectrical installation 
Gas Engine mechanics 


course 


course 


120 West 46th 


Sign painting 






Street 


Steam engineering- 
Tailoring- 






Public School 64 


Electrical Installation 


Dependent on 


Dependent on 


(Evening) 


Printing and Press work 


course 


course 


Berriman and 








Atkins Aves., 








Brooklyn 









44 



1 .- 

I'crm 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept.-June 
i Sept. -March 


9 a. m.-5 p. m. 
except Sat. 

7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon., Tues., 

Thurs. 


Male 

Male 


.15120 per yr. 
Extras $45-$60 

$12-$25 per 3 nios. 






Sept.-June 


7:45 p. m.- 
9:45 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept. -May 


2 sessions pei' 
week of 2 
hours each 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept. -May 


7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Two evenings 
a week. 


Male 
Female 


Free 






Sept. -May 


7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Two evenings 
a week. 


Male 
Female 


Free 








7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Two evenings 
a week. 


Male 


Free 







45 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Auinc 


Courses* 


A4lini.<4!>)iou 


Lt«nstli ot 






He(iuireiucnt!!« 


Course 


Radio Institute of 


Radio technic code (Continen- 


Age 16 


Day, about 5 


America, 


tal) 
Systems 


Elementary 


mos. 


( formerly Mar- 


Telephony 


school or 


Eve., about 6 


coni Institute) 




equivalent ed- 
ucation 


mos. 


326 Broadway 








Rhinelander 


Embroidery 


Crippled 


2 yrs. 


School 


Italian Cut-work and lettering 
Sewing- (plain) 


Age 16 


350 E. 68th St. 


Weaving- (Swedish) 




(Children's A i d 






Society School) 








R. Hoe & Com- 


Carpentry 


Age 16-18 


4 yrs. 


pany 


Drawing 
Mechanical 


Employed b y 
company 




504 Grand St. 


Electricity 




4 yrs. 




Forcing- 


Elementary 


4 yrs. 






school gradu- 






Machine shop work 


ates preferred 






Mathematics 








Moulding and core making 




3 yrs. 




Pattern making 




5 yrs. 


School for Print- 


English 


Age 16 


About 4 yrs. 


ers Apprentices 
of New York 


Printing 


Registered 
union appren- 
tices (compo- 


Dependent on 
length of ap- 
prenticeship 


494 Sixth Ave. 




sition) 

1 yr. shop ex- 
perience 




S e w a r d Park 


Cabinet making 


Employed in 


2 yrs. 


Evening High 




trade chosen 




and Trade 


Design 


Elementarv 




School for Men 


Garment 


school or 




and AVomen 


Drawing 


equivalent ed- 






Commercial 


ucation 




Hester, Essex 


Mechanical 






and Norfolk Sts. 


Dressmaking- 
Electricity 

Installation 
Machine shop work 
Millinery 

Motion picture operating 
Novelty making 
Painting 

Poster 

Sign 
Printing 

Sheet metal work 
Tailorincr 







46 



Term 


fIoiDr») 


Sex 


Tuition nnd Fees 


Scholarships 


Ileinurks 


Open all yr. 


10 a. m.-5 p. m. 
7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


$10-$20 per month 
.$15 per month 


Several 




Sept. -June 


9 a. m.- 
3:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 




Maintains den- 
tal clinic, 
health center 
and open air 
classes 

Girls placed in 
School's 
workshops 


Oct. -June 


5:20 p. m.- 
6:45 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 

Supper supplied 


Prizes 




Sept.-June 


3:30 p. m.- 
5:30 p. m. 

G p. m.-S p. m. 


Male 
Female 


1st year $10 
2nd year $12.50 
3rd year $15 
4th year $20 




Required at- 
tendance is 
one day and 
one evening 
session each 

Supported 
jointly by 
the Print- 
ers' League 
Section of 
the N. T. 
Employing 
Print- 
ers' Asso- 
ciation, Inc., 
and Typo- 
grap h ical 
Union No. 6. 


Sept.-June 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 




■ 



47 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 



Stewart Automo- 
bile School 



Courses 



225 



57th St, 



Stuyvesant Even- 
ing Trade School 



First Ave. 
15th St. 



and 



Stuyvesant High 
School 



First Ave. 
15th St. 



and 



Automotive work 
Carburetion 
Driving- 
Ignition 
Meciianics 
Repaiiing 
Airplane 

Boat 

Passenger car 

Tractor 

Truck 
Special courses 
Driving 

Electrical work 
Mechanical work 



Admissiou 
Re«iuiretuents 



No restrictions 



Blacksmithing 
Cliemistry (industrial) 
Design 

Garment 

Structural steel 
Drawing 

Architectural 

Commercial 

Freehand 

Mechanical 
Electricity 
Engineering 
Machine shop work 
Mathematics 
Photography 
Physics 
Plumbing 
Radio work 
Telegraphy 
Wood working 

Cabinet making 

Joinery 

Pattern making 

Wood turning 



Design 
Machine 
Ship 

Drawing 

Architectural 
Freehand 
Mechanical 
Topographical 

Electricity 

Forging 

Instrument making 

Machine shop work 

Metal Work 

Pattern making 

Surveying 

Wood working- 
Cabinet 
Joinery 
Wood turning 



Age 14 

Speak English 

Employed dur- 
ing day in 
trade applied 
for 



Leng'th of 
Cour-<e 



6-12 wks. 



By arrangement 



1-3 yrs. 

Dependent o n 
course and on 
individual 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



4 yrs. 



48 



Term 


Hours 


Set 


Tuition and Fees 


Seholariships 


Itcniarks 


Open all yr. 


Day 

Evening- 


Male 
Female 


$90 
$36-$84 






Sept. -May 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. ni. 
Mon. and Wed. 

or Tues. and 

Thurs. 


Male 


Free 






Sept. -June 


S a. m.- 
5:20 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 


Free 







49 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 







Admission 


JLength «£ 






Requirements 


Course 


Textile Evening 


Cabinet making' 


Dependent on 


Dependent 


Trade School 


Costume Design 
Cottons 


course 


on course 


Public School 


Embroidery 






26 


Foreign trade 






120 West 30th 


Garment design 
Knitted fabrics 






Street 


Loom fixing- 
Mending 

Knitted fabrics 
Mill engineering- 
Mill mathematics 
Mill -vvrighting 
Pile fabrics 
Ribbon manufacture 
Shop and Mill mathematics 
Silks 

Textile chemistry 
Upholstery fabrics 
Woolens and -worsteds 






Textile High 


Chemistry and Dyeing 


Age 14 


2-3 yrs. 


School 


Design 








Costume 


1-2 yrs. High 




124 W. 30th St. 


Textile 


School 






General textile course 


Freehand dra-w- 






Textile manufacturing and en- 


mg- 






gineering 








Textile marketing 


Approval of 
principal 




Trade School for 


Basketry 


Age 6-18 


4 yrs. 


the Deaf — 
P. S. 47 


Flower making 
Lettering (hand) 
Machine shop -work 


Partial or total 
deafness 




225 E. 23rd St. 


Millinerj' 


Mentality nor- 






Printing 


mal 






Se-wing 






Uttmark's Radio 


Radio 


Age 15 


Day. about 4 


School 


Apparatus 
Adjustment 


, 


mos. 




Operation 




Eve., about 6 


8 State St. 


Repair 
Code 

Duties at sea 
Laboratory -work 
Teleg-raphy (Morse) 
Theory 




mos. 



50 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept.-May 


7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 

Two evenings 
a week. 


Male 

Female 


Free 




• 


Sept. -June 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 


Male 
Female 

■ 


Free 






Sept. -June 


3^ hrs. each 
week. 


Male 
Female 


Free 




Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio w-up 
system 

Monthly alum- 
ni report on 
positions 
held and 
work done 


Open all yr 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
Sat. 9 a. m.- 
12 m. 

7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 


Male 
Female 

1 


•$30 per month 
$15 per month 







51 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Vocational School 
for Boys 



Fifth Ave. 
138th St. 



and 



Automobile work 
Chemistry (indu-strial) 
Design 

Commercial 

Industrial 
Drawing 

Architectural 

Freehand 

Mechanical 
Electric flash sign work 

Manufacturing 

Operating' 
Electricity 

Installation 

Motor and dynamo 

Storage battery 

Use of measuring instru- 
ments 
Wiring (bell, light, power) 
Forging 
Foundry work 
Gas engine meclianies 

Automobile 

Marine 
Gas fitting 
Machine shop work 
Mathematics (trade) 
Modelling (for dies, ornaments, 

etc.) 
Pattern making 
Physics 
Plan reading 
Plumbing 
Printing 

Bookbinding 

Composition 

EstiiTiating 

Imposition 

Linotype assembling and 
operating 

Monotype casting and 
operating 

Pressworlc 
Proofreading 

Sliow card writing (advertis- 
ing) 
Sign painting 
Wood working 

Cabinet making 

Carpentry 

Turning 



Ailmi.s.siou 



Elementary 
School Gradu- 
ate 

Approval of 
authorities 



Length of 
Co Jir.se 



Washing t o n 
Heights Evening 
High School 



521 W. 

St. 



14 5th 



Design 

Commercial 
Drawing 

Architectural 

Freehand 

Mechanical 
Dressmaking 
Millinery 



Elementary 
school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 



2 yrs. 



1 yr. 



Sex 



Tuition and Fees 



Scholarships 



Remarlis 



Sept.-July 



9 a. m.-4 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Male 



Free 



Sept. -June 



8 p. m.-lO p. m. 
except Sat. 



Male 
Female 



Free 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 



Washington Irving 
High School 

40 Irving Place 



Western Union 
Telegraph Co. 

24 Walker St. 



Young Men's 
Christian As- 
s o c i a t i o 11 , 
llrooklyn 

55 Hanson PI. 



Young Men's 
Christian As- 
sociation 

23rd St. Branch 

215 W. 23rd St. 



Coiir.scs 



1^ o u n g Men's 
Christian As- 
sociation, AVest 
Side T3raiich 

3] 8 W. 57th St. 



Dressmaking- 
Academic Subjects 
Domestic Science and Art 
Elementary Dressmaking 
Costume Design and Dress- 
ma Iv in g- 
Domestic Art (Millinery) 
Applied Chemistry 
Costume Illustration 
Dress Design and Pattern 
making- 
Home and Trade Course in 
Food and Cookery 
Academic Subjects 
Sewing- 
Cookery 
Biology 

Foods and Cookery 
Bookkeeping 
Type-vvriting- 
Household Decoration 
Lunch Room Service 
Industrial Art Course 
Academic Subjects 
Domestic Science and Art 
Elementary Art 
Art 

Domestic Art (Se-wing and 
Millinery) 



Admii^Nion 
Ke«iiiiremeiit» 



I^enjrth of 
Course 



ElementaryS yrs. 

school gradu- | 4th year option- 
ates al 



Telegraphy 
Code (Morse) 
Routine 
Typing 



Drawing 

Architectural 

Mechanical 
Technical 

Electricity (practical) 

Engineering- (elementary) 



Chemistry (industrial) 

Oxy-acetylene weldin? 
cutting 



and 



Automobile work 

Driving 

Mechanics 

Repair 

Road -work 

Shop work 
Forging- 

Machine tool operating 
Mechanical dentistry 
Motion picture machine oper- 
ating- 
Traffic management 



of 



Age 16 

Employee 
company 



Exams in arith- 
metic, geog- 
raphy, spell- 
ing 

Physical exam. 

Vaccination 



Approval of 
director 



H. S. graduate 
or equivalent 
education, or 
practical ex- 
perience 

Approval of di- 
rector 



No restrictions 



About 6 mos. 
Dependent on 
individual 



32 wks. 
S wks. 



Dependent o n 
course and on 
individual 



54 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships Remarlcs 


Sept.-June 


9 a .m.-4 p. m. 


Female 








Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-ll p. m. 

Sessions v a - 
ried to meet 
require- 
ments 


Male 
Female 


Free 




No remunera- 
t i o n while 
learning 

Pupil placed 
with Com- 
pany 


Open all yr. 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 








Oct.-Jan. 


7:30 p. m.- 

9:45 p. m. 

7 p. m.-9 p. m. 


Male 


$40.25 
$50.25 


Prices include 
one year's 
membership 
in Y. M. C. A. 




Open all yr. 


Day and Eve. 


Male 
Female 

Male 

Male 
Female 


$40-$300 

$6.50 membership 
fee 




N o approved 
young man 
debarred for 
lack of funds 



55 



II. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 


Length of 






Require nients 


Course 


Young Women's 


Candy making' 


Member of 


Dependent on 


Chi'lstian As- 


Design 


Y. W. C. A. 


individual 


sociation, 


Costume 
Poster 
Dressmaking- 


No restrictions 




Brooklyn 
Branch 


for special 
courses 






Embroidery 






276 Schermer- 


Flower making 






horn St., B'klyn 


Hairdressing 

Interior decoration 

Manicuring and shampooing- 

Massage (facial) 

Millinery 

Nursing- (practical) 

Tea room 

Cookery 

Management 






Eastern District 


Design 






Brancli 


Costume 






575 Bedford 


Dressmaking- 






Ave. and Keap 


Millinery 






St., Brooklyn 








Greenpoint 


Dressmaking 






Branch 


Millinery 






128 Milton St. 








Branch for Color- 


Dressmaking 






ed Girls 


Millinery 






45 Ashland PI. 








Young AVonien's 


Design 


For Day School: 


Dependent on 


Hebrew Associ- 


Batik 
Embroidery 


Elementary 
school educa- 


individual 


ation 


Costume 
Poster 


tion; exam. 




31 W. llOth St. 


Textile 


For Evening 






Dra-wing 


School: Age 






Casts 


17, exam. 






Freehand 








Life 








Painting 


Member of 






Still life 


Y. W. H. A. 





5(i 



Open all yr. 



Hours 



7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 
9 a. m. 
2:30 p. m. 



Female 



Open all yr. 



8 p. m.-lO p. m. 
M o n ., Tues., 
Wed., Thurs. 
8 a. m.-12 m. 
Sun. 



Tuition and Fees 



Day $14 per mo. 
Eve. $6 per mo. 



Female 



Soliolarsliips 



Remarks 



Special classes 
$1 to $10 



1 covering 
tuition 

8 of $150 each 



Placement bu- 
r e a u and 
folio -w-u p 
system 

172 gfirls, age 
18-25, may 
board in 
Home $3-$ll 
per week 



57 



III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Course.<j 


Vdinlssion 
Requirements 


Length of 
Course 


American A c a d - 


.Junior, Senior and Profes- 


Instinct and 


6 mos. 


emy of Drama- 
tic Arts 


sional Courses 


ability 




Acting reliearsals 








Dramatic analysis 






Carnegie Hall, 


Interpretation 
Liiterature 






Seventh Ave. 


Physical training 






and 57th St. 


Action 

Dancing 

Fencing 

Health 
Reading rehearsals 
Stage training 

Business (stage) 

Costuming 

Make-up 

Mechanics 
Vocal training 

English diction 

Speech 






Art Students' 


Drawing 


Approval of in- 


8 mos. 


League of New 


Antique 
Life 


structors 


Summer school 


York 


Etching 




N. Y. C. 


215 W. 57th St. 


Illustration 




Summer school 




Lectures 




Woodstock, 




Anatomy 




N. Y. 




Composition 








History of art 








Perspective 








Modeling 








Painting 








Life 








Portrait 








Still life 






Ballard School 


Dramatic art 


Members of Y. 


Dependent on 




Elocution 


W. C. A. 


course 


Y. W. C. A. 








(Central Branch) 








610 Lexington 








Ave. 








Beaux-Arts Insti- 


Architecture 


No restrictions 


Dependent o n 


tute of Design 


Interior decoration 

Mural painting and Composi- 




individual 


126 East 75th 


tion 






St. 


Ornament modelling 
Sculpture 






Bronx House Mu- 


Harmony 


Interest in sub- 


Dependent o n 


sic School 


History 
Orchestra 


ject 


individual 


1637 Washing- 


Junior 






ton Ave. 


Senior 
Piano 

Teachers Training 
Violin 








Violoncello 






Chalif Normal 


Dancing Courses for 


No restrictions 


2 yrs. for di- 


School of Dan- 


Amateurs 
Physical educators 




ploma 


cing 


Professionals 
Recreation leaders 






163 West 57th 


Teachers 






St. 









5S 



Hours 



Sex 



Tuition and Fees 



Scholarships 



Remarks 



Open all yr. 



9 a. m.-6 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



.noo-$4oo 



Oct. -June 

June-Sept. 

June-Oct. 



9 a. m.-lO p. m. 

Saturday 
8:30 a. m.- 
5 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Sept.-June 

Summer 
session 
June-July 



Open all yr, 



Oct. -June 



Open all yr. 



9:30 a. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
except Sat. 



Day and eve. 



Female 



Day, $70-$80 per 
year 

Evening-, $52 

Saturday, $30-$45 

Material and 
tools extra 



.$27 



Male 



2 p. m.-lO p. m. 



40 min. 
30 min. 



Daily except 
Saturday 



Male 
Female 



Male 
Female 



Architectural de- 
sign, $2 

Reg-istration fee 

Other courses 
free 



For students 
of excep- 
tional abili- 
ty, elemen- 
tary or ad- 
vanced 



$15 

75^ 



$5-$215 



59 



1 Paris Prize 

Prizes in all 
courses 



Tuition free in 
exceptional 
cases 

Student Aid 
Fund 

Employment 
bureau 



Several 



Several 



III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


<'oiirse.»s 


A(Iinis.>iion 


1-eiistU of 






rSeqsjirertients 


i\tUT!iC 


Clarence H. White 


Photography 


P. S. diploma 




School of Pho- 
tography 


Color 

Copying- 

Desig-n 

Kiilarging- 






460 West 144th 


Lantern slide making- 






St. 


Print making- 




20 sessions 




Professional course 




10 wks. 




Processes 








Aquatint 








Dry point 








Japanese 








Line 








Linoleum-cut 








Mezzotint 








Monotype 








Photo eng-raving- 








Photogravure 




15 sessions 




Printing- and lettering- 






Soft ground 








Wood cut 








Vocation of Photography and 




30 wks. winter 




Training- Course 




course 
Spring session, 

Canaan 
Summer session, 

Canaan, 8 

wks. 
Summer session, 

N. T. C, 6 








wks. 


Cooper Union for 


Day School 


Age 16 for study 


4 yrs. 


the Advance- 


Design 


in dra-wing 




ment of Science 


Advertising 
Costume 


Age 18 for study 




and Art 


Decorative 


in designing 




Fourth Ave. and 


Dra-wing 
Antique 






8th St. 


Casts 

Elementary 
Freehand 
Life 

General drawing-, sketching- and 

painting- course 
Illustration 

Costume 

General 

Interior decoration 

Modeling- 
Casts 
Life 

Painting- 
Mural 
Portrait 
Still life 








Eveiiins' School 


Age 16 


2-4 yrs. 




Composition 




Dependent on 
course 




Decorative 






Pictorial 








Design 








Advertising 








Costume 








Decorative 








Furniture 








Poster 








Dra-wing 








Antique 








Casts 








Elementary 








Life 








Historical Decorative Art 








Interior decoration 








Modeling- 








Casts 








Tafe 







60 



Term 



Howrs 



Tiiitiou and Pees 



Scholarships 



Remarks 



9 a. m.-4 p.m. 
except Sat. 
Eve. 8 p. m.- 
9:10 p. m. 



Nov. -Mar. 



Feb. 

Oct. -Jan. 
May 15 
July 

July 



Sept. -May 



Male 
Female 



$5-$300 



9 a. m.-4 p. m. 



7:30 p. m. 
9:30 p. m. 



Male 
Female 



Male 
Female 



Free 

Expenses for In- 
struments, ma- 
terials, etc. 



Free 

Expenses for In- 
struments, ma- 
terials, etc. 



61 



III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Requirements 


Length of 
Course 


David Mannes Mu- 
sic School 


Choral 
Composition 


Interest in sub- 
ject 


Dependent on 
individual 


157 East 74th 


Harmony 
Harp 






St. 


History 
Languages 

English 

French 

German 

Italian 
Orchestra 
Organ 
Piano 

Sight reading 
Singing 

Chorus 

Individual 








Teachers Training 

A — for teachers of Class 
Singing in Public Schools 
B — for teachers of instru- 
ments 
Viola 




2-3 yrs. each 
course, depen- 
dent on work 
done before 
entrance 




Violin 








Violoncello 






Institute of Musi- 
cal Art of the 
City of New 
York 

120 Claremont 
Ave. 


Appreciation 

Composition 

Bar Training 

Harmony 

Harp 

History 

Language 

Orchestra 

Organ 

Piano 

Sight reading 

Singing 

Theory 

Violin 

Violoncello 


High school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation 

Approval of fac- 
ulty 


3-4 yrs. 

Post-Graduate 2 
yrs. 


Library School of 
the New York 
Public Library' 

Fifth Ave. and 
42(1 St. 


Administration 

Art and the Book 

Bibliography 

Book selection 

Business library methods 

Cataloguing 

Classification 

Current Events 


Age 20-35 

Physician's cer- 
tificate 

High school or 
equivalent ed- 
ucation, mini- 
mum require- 
ment 


1 yr. for certifi- 
cate 

2 yrs. for di- 
ploma 




Government publications 
Library and community work 


Entrance exam- 
ination 






Printing and indexing 
School library work 
Special library methods 
Typing 







62 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scliolarsliips 


Remarlcs 


Oct.-May 


Day and 
evening 


Male 
Female 


$5-$700 






Oct. -June 


9 a. m.-6 p. m. 
daily 


Male 
Female 


$15-$400 


Several 
Prizes 




Sept.-June 


Day 


Male 
Female 


1st year $75 

New York resi- 
dent or com- 
muting $45 

2nd year $25 

Supplies and in- 
spection tours 
extra 

Registration fee 

$5 







III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 







Admission 


Length of 






Requirements 


Course 


Manhattan Eve- 


Teachers' Training course foi- 


Age 16 


2 yrs. 


n i n g Trade 


Industrial Schools 


Employed in 




School 




trade during 
day 




129 E. 22nd St. 








Metropolitan 


Dancing 


Aptitude for 


Dependent o n 


Opera Ballet 


Ballet training course 


subject 


individual 


School 








Metropolitan 








Opera House 








Music School of 
East Side House 


Glee Club 
Orchestra 


Interest in sub- 
ject 


Dependent o n 
individual 


Settlement 


Piano 
Violin 






540 E. 76th St. 


Violoncello 






3Iusic School Set- 


Choral 


Interest in sub- 


Denendent o n 


tlement 


Dancing- 
English 


ject 


individual 


51 East 3rd St. 


Orchestra 

Piano 

Singing 

Theory 

Violin 

Violoncello 

Wind instruments 






National Academy 
of Design 


Composition 
Drawing 
Antique 


Age under 30 
Examination in 


Dependent o n 
individual. 
Maximum 


Amsterdam Ave. 


Figure 
Portrait 


drawing 


5-6 yrs. 


and 109th St. 


Etching 
Lectures 

Anatomy 

Graphic arts 

Ornament 

Perspective 
Painting 

Figure 

Portrait 

Still life 






New York School 


Design 


Age over 16 


18 mos. 


of Applied De- 


Conventionalized 
Ornament 




elementary 
course 


sign for Women 


Poster 








Textile 




2 yrs. each ad- 


16 Lexington 


Drawing 




vanced course 


Ave. 


Architectural 




3 yrs. 




Freehand 






Flower painting and drawing 








Illustration 








Interior decoration 








Ornament (historic) 







64 



Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


Sept.-May 


7:30 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 
Mon. & Wed. 
or 

Tues. & Tliurs. 


Female 


Free 






Sept.-June 


Beginner 

9 a. m.-lO a. m. 

Children 
4:30 p. m.- 
6 p. m. 

Advanced 

4 p. m.-6 p. m. 


Female 


$15 per month 
$15 per month 

$30 for 12 lessons 


Pupils accept- 
ed in Ballet 
are entitled 
to free tui- 
tion 




Oct.-July 

Summer 

session 
J.uly-Sept. 


3 p. m.-7 p. m. 

Saturday 

9 a. m.-l p. m. 

Wed. eve. 
7 p. m.- 
9:30 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


50(J per lesson 
Class lessons, 25(? 


20 




Oct. -June 


40 min. 


Male 
Female 


65«' for individual 
lesson 

350 for class 
lesson 
(2 pupils) 


63 


Maintain a 
Musical 
Bureau to 
arrange 
engagement 
for pupils 


Sept. -Apr. 


9 a. m.-12 m. 
1 p. m.-4 p. m. 
7 p. m.-lO p. m. 

Saturdays 
9 a. m.-12 m. 


Male 
Female 


Free 

Materials extra 

Matriculation $10, 
for chair and 
easel, each 
term 


1 European 
(2 years) 
given every 
2 years 

1 (1 year) 
training and 
study 

Prizes each 
course 




Oct.-May 


9:30 a. m.- 
4 p. m. 


Female 


$25-$165 

Extras 
$15-135 


75 


Maintains 
bureau of 
sales and 
positions 



65 



III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 


Length of 






Uequlrements 


Course 


New York School 


Architecture 


Approval of 


3 yrs. 


of Fine and Ap- 
plied Art 


House planning 
Landscape 
r3esign 


school 


minimum 


2239 Broadway, 


Advertising- 
Costume 






New York 


Poster 
Stage 






16 Avenue Wa- 


Drawing 






gram, Paris, 


Life ("Hambridge Research") 






France 


Illustration 
Interior Decoration 






New York School 


Anatomy 


Elementary 


4-8 mos. 


of Medical 


Exercise 


school educa- 




GjTiinastics and 


Corrective 
Hygienic 


tion 




Massage 


Gymnastics 


1 year High 
School desir- 




616 Madison 


Hygiene 


able 




Ave. 


Kinesiology 
Massage 
Orthopedics 
Pathology 
Physiology 

Theory of massage and medical 
gymnastics 






Pri^.tt Institute 
School of Fine 


Architecture 

Construction 
Design 


For normal 
course, age 
19, H. S. grad. 


2-3 yrs. 


and Applied 


Applied 






Arts 


Crafts 


For vocational 






Drawing 


course, age 17, 




215 Ryerson St., 


Color 
Freehand 


H. S. or equiv- 
alent educa- 




Brooklyn 


Life 
Illustration 


tion 






Commercial 


For evening 






Costume 
Pictorial 


courses, age 
15, employed 
during day, 






Interior decoration 


approval of 






Jewelry 


instructors 






Chasing 








Silversmithing 








Mural decoration 








Normal course 








Art 








Manual training 








Painting 






Pratt Institute 


Library training 


Age 20-40 


1 yr. 


School of Libra- 


Administration 
Book selection 


H. S. grad., en- 




ry Science 


Story telling 


trance exam- 






Technical work 


ination, typ- 




215 Ryerson St., 




ing 




Brooklyn 




2 modern lan- 
guages 





Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees 


Scholarships 


Remarks 


New York, 


9 a. m.- 


Male 


$200 season 


Seyeral 




Sept.-June 


3:30 p. m. 


Female 


$5 entrance fee 






Paris, 


Saturdays 










Mar. -Dec. 


9 a. m.-12 m. 










Summer 












sessions: 






$50 all classes 






N. Y., 
July 5, 






Materials extra 






Aug. 18 












Paris, 












June 1, 












Sept. 1 












Open all yr. 


9 a. m.-4 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


$150-$250 






Sept.-June 


Day 

9 a. m.-4 p. m. 


Male 


$100 per annum 


14 


Part of 
scholarships 




except Sat. 


Female 






are for stu- 
dents who 
have been at 
least 1 year 
in Pratt In- 
stitute 




7:30 p. m.- 




$15 for 6 mos. 








9:30 p. m. 












Mon., Tues., 












Thurs. 










Sept.-June 


9 a. m.-5 p. m. 


Male 
Female 


$150 




Students Aid 
Fund 

Maintains 
placement 
bureau and 
follow - up 
system 



67 



III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Requirements 


Length of 
Course 


Savage School for 


Junior and Senior Courses 


High school di- 
ploma 


2 yrs. 


Physical Educa- 


Anatomy 




tion 


Anthropometry 


Physical exam- 






Athletics 


ination 




308 West 59th 


Chemistry 


Interest in sub- 




St. 


Dancing 

Aesthetic 

Folk 

Interpretative 

National 

Social 
Dramatic work 
First Aid 
Gymnastics 
Hygiene 
Kinesiology 
Methods 
Nursing (home) 
Pedagogy 
Physiology 
Playground training 
Swimming 
Welfare work 


ject 




School of Design 


Design 


High school 


About 2 yrs. 


and Liberal 


Costume 


diploma or 




Textile 


exceptional 




Arts 


Drawing 

Life classes 


talent 




212, W. 59th St. 


Dveing 

Batik 
Illustration 

Book 

Commercial 

Poster 
Interior decoration 
Weaving 

Hand loom 






Seymour School of 
3Iusical Re-edu- 


Composition and Instrumenta- 


Interest; ability 


Dependent o n 


tion 


to play and 
sing accepta- 


individual and 
on course 


cation 




bly 






Harmony (advanced) 




10 wks. 


57 W. 48th St. 


Musical Re-education 

Harmony (elementary; how 








to teach children's classes) 




25 lessons 




Psychology 








Teachers' material 








Normal Classes 




10 wks. 




Piano 




10 wks. 




Rhythm 








Singing- 








Community 








Individual 








Plainsong 








Voice fundamentals 




10 wks. 




Song Leading and Community 








Music Organization 




10 wks. 




Talks on Orchestra 






1 Appreciation 




10 wks. 



(-;s 















Term 


Hours 


Sex 


Tuition and Fees Scholarsbiips 


Remarks 


Sept.-June 


4-5 hours daily 


Male 
Female 


Registration fee 

$5 

Annual $200-$300 

Graduation fee 

$10 


1— $75 
1 — $65 
1— $60 




Oct.-June 


9:30 a. m.- 
4 p.m. 


Male 
Female 


$200 

Supplies extra 


Limited num- 
ber of part 
and full 
scholarships 
for pupils 
of e X c e p - 
tional talent 
or special 
training 




Oct.- June 

Summer 

session 
July-Sept., 

Nyack, 

N. Y. 




Male 
Female 


$30 course 
$60 course 

$60 course 
$30 course 

$30-$150 

$25 course 
$35 course 
$25 course 


Yes 










69 







III. SEMI-PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 



Name 


Courses 


Admission 
Requirements 


Lengtii of 
Course 


Webb's Academy 


Chemistry 


U. S. citizens 


4 yrs. 


of Naval Archi- 


Desig-n 


Age 15-21 




tecture and Ma- 


Boiler 






rine Engineer- 


Marine engine 


High school 






Drawing- 


education 




ing 


Mechanical 








Electi'ic.ity 


Examination in 




(Webb's Acade- 


English 


mathematics 




my and Home 








for Ship Build- 
ers) 


Graphic statics 
Heat 






Hydraulics 






Sedgwick Ave. 


Internal combustion engine 






and 188th St. 


Marine engine 
Marine propulsion 
Mathematics 

Algebra 

Calculus 

Differential equations 

Geometry 
Plane 
Solid 

Trigonometry 
Mechanics of materials 
Naval Architecture 
Producer gas 
Steam turbines 
Thermo dynamics 
Valve gears 










H. S. grad. or 


2 yrs. 


Y o u n g AVomen'.s 


Normal Course 


4 yrs. course 




Christian 


Anatomy 


i n approved 




Association 


Camp life 
First aid 


secondary 
school 




(Central Branch) 


Gymnastics 


Physician's cer- 






Corrective 


tificate 




School of Hygiene 


Remedial 






and Physical 


Kinesiology 


Medical, physi- 
cal and intel- 




Education 


Nursing (home) 
Physical education 


ligence exams. 




610 Lexington 


Athletics 






Ave. 


Dancing 






Games and sports 








Gymnastics 








Hygiene 








Organization and administra- 








tion 








Swimming 








Teaching- methods and prac- 








tice 








Special swimming course 




1 yr. 




Canoeing 








Diving: 








First aid 








Life saving 








Pool work 








Construction 








Equipment 








Management 








Sanitation 








Teaching- practice 








Water games and sports 








70 







Sept. -June 



Hoursi 



a. in.-3 p. m. 



Sex 



Male 



Tuition and Fees 



Free, including 
living expenses 
and supplies 



Scholarships 



Remarket 



Sept.-July 

(June in 
camp) 



9 a. m.-4 p. m. 



Female 



$300 (including 
camp fee) 

Books and uni- 
forms extra 

Registration $10 



Several 



$200 

$75 camp fee 

Books and uni- 
forms extra 

Registration $10 



Loans for 
senior stu- 
dents 

Employment 
Bureau 



71 



INDEX of SUBJECTS 

PAGE 

Accounting 

Girls Commercial High School 8 

High School of Commerce 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Merchants and Bankers Business School 12 

Morris High School 11^ 

New York Edison Company 14 

Y. M. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 18 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Administration 

Building : 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Household : 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Lunchroom: (Cafeteria, Tearoom) 

Ballard School— Y. w! C. A. . . . ! 2^ 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn 56 

TiCal Estate: 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 06 

Shop : 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Advertising 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 60 

East Side Evening High School 6 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 6 

Evander Childs High School S 

Haaren High School 10 

liigli School of Commerce 10 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School ?>6 

Y. W.'C. A.— Brooklyn Branch . 20 

Architecture — (See Drawing) 

Architecture — (Naval) 

Web])s Institute of Naval Architecture 70 

Art — (Painting, Sculpture, etc.) 

Art Students ' League of New York 58 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 58 

73 



PAGE 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Beaux-Arts Institute of Design 58 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 24 

Brooklyn Evening High School 24 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 60 

Mechanics Institute 36 

National Academy of Design 64 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

New York School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

School of Fine and Applied Arts, Pratt Institute 66 

Y. W. H. A 56 

Automobile — (Mechanics and Repair) 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Trade School 38 

New York Auto School 38 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 67 44 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Y. M. C. A.— West Side^Branch 54 

Automotive — (Mechanics and Engineering) 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

New York Electrical School 40 

New York Trade School 42 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Stewart Automobile School 48 

Banking 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

High School of Commerce 10 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Blacksmithing — (See Forging) 
Blue-Prints — (See Plan Reading) 

Bookkeeping 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Bay Ridge High School 2 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 4 

Brooklyn Evening High School 4 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 4 

Bushwick High School 4 

Central Evening High School for Women 4 

Commercial High School 6 

Cooper Union (Secretarial School) 6 

74 



PAGE 

East Side Evening High School 6 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 6 

Evander Childs High School 8 

Girls Commercial High School 8 

Girls High School 8 

Haaren High School 10 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 10 

High School of Commerce 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Merchants and Bankers Business School 12 

Miller School 12 

Morris Evening High School ■ 12 

Morris High School 14 

New Lots Evening High School •. . . 14 

New Utrecht High School , 14 

New York Edison Company 14 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 16 

Washington Heights Evening High School 16 

Washington Irving High School 18 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Y. W. H. A 20 

Brick-Laying 

New York Trade School 42 

Cabinet Making 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . . 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Candy Making 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn 56 

Carpentry 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

B. Hoe and Company 46 

Chair Making 

Blind Men's Work Shop 22 

Chemistry — (Industrial) 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick High School 26 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 28 

75 



PAGE 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Y. M. C. A.— TAventy-third Street 54 

Clock and Watch Repair 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Comptometer 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 20 

Costume Design 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Ait 60 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 32 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

McDowell Dressmaking and Millinery School 36 

New York School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Puglisi School 42 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Textile High School 50 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 56 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 56 

Dancing 

Chalif Normal School of Dancing 58 

Savage School for Physical Education 68 

Design 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 24 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 60 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 28 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

McDowell Dressmaking and Millinery School 36 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 36 

New Lots Evening High School 38 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

New York School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 56 

Dictaphone 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 20 



Die Making 

Hebrew Technical Institute ;';2 

Domestic Science and Art 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Washington Irving High School 54 

Dramatic Art 

American Academy of Dramatic Arts 5S 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 58 

Savage School for Physical Education 68 

Drawing— (See also Art, Design) 
Architectural : 

Beaux-Arts Institute of Design 58 

Brooklyn Evening High School 24 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Eastern Evening Trade School 28 

Harlem Evening Trade School p,0 

Mechanics Institute .36 

Murray Hill Trade School :^6 

New Lots Evening High School 38 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High' School 48 

Vocational School f oi' Boys 59 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

Commercial: 

Harlem Evening Trade School .30 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

StujHi^esant Evening Ti-ade School 48 

Freehand : 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 24 

Brooklyn Evening High School 24 

Cooper Union for the Advancement oi' iScience and Art 60 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 28 

Harlem Evening Trade School .30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New Lots Evening High School 38 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School •. 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 59 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 56 

77 



PAGE 
Mechanical: 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Brooklyn Evening High School 24 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Bushwick High School 26 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 28 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 28 

Erasmus Hall High School 30 

Haaren High School 30 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Manual Training High School 34 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New Lots Evening High School 38 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

R. Hoe and Company 46 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

Webb 's Institute of Naval Architecture 70 

Y. M. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 54 

Topographical : 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Surveying : 

Pan-American Electrical Society, Inc 42 

Dressmaking 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 24 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Central Evening High School for Women 28 

Clara de Hirsch Home for Working Girls 28 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 32 

Italian Evening School 32 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

McDowell Dressmaking and Millinery School 36 

New Lots Evening High School 38 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

Washington Irving High School 54 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklvn Branch 56 



PAGE 

Dyeing 

Textile High School 50 

Electrical Engineering — (See Engineering) 

Electricity — (General) 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

P. S. 95— Evening Trade School 44 

Haaren High School 30 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Edison Company 40 

New York Electrical School 40 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 5 44 

Public School No. 67 44 

Public School No. 64 44 

R. Hoe and Company 46 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

Stewart Automobile School 48 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Y. M. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 54 

Elocution 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 58 

Cooper Union (School of Elocution and Oratory) 6 

Embroidery 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 24 

Crippled Children's East Side Free School 28 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 32 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Ehinelander School 46 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 56 

Engineering 

Chemical : 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Civil : 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Cooper Union 28 

79 



PAGE 
Electrical: 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 28 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Gas: 

Harlem Evening Trade School .'50 

Industrial : 

Pratt Institute, School of Science 44 

Marine: 

Navigation, Marine Engineering and Radio School of the Seamen's 

Church Institute ?.S 

Webb's Institute of Naval Architecture 70 

Mechanical : 

Brooklyn Evening Teclmical and Trade School 24 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Stea-K', : 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Cooper Union 2S 

Harlem Evening Trade School ?.0 

' Public School No. 67 44 

Estimating — (See Plan Reading) 

Etching 

• Art Students ' League of New York 58 

National Academy of Design 64 

Feather Making 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls . 34 

Filing 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Katharine Gibbs School '. 12 

New York School of Piling 14 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 20 

Flower Making 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Trade School for the Deaf, P. S. No. 47 50 

Foreign Trade 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Textile Evening Trade School . 50 

Forging 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

80 



PAGE 

Hebrew Technical Institute '?>- 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Techiiol();j,y 44 

R. Hoe and Company 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Y. M. C. A.— West Side Branch 54 

Gas Engine Mechanics 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwiek Evening Trade School 26 

Public School No^. 67 44 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Hospital Dietetics 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science an.l Arts 42 

Illustration 

Book : 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

CommerciaJ : 

Bushwiek Evening Trade School 26 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

Costume : 

Cooper Union 61^ 

New York School of Applied Design for AVoukmi 64 

New York School of Pine and Applied Art 66 

School of Design and Liberal Art 68 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

Institutional Household Science 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Instrument Making 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Interior Decorating 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Beaux- Arts Institute of Design 58 

Cooper Union 60 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

New York School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

Y. W. C. A. — Brooklyn Branch 56 

Jewelry Making and Design 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

81 



PAGE 

Joinery — (See Carpentry) 

Lampshade Making — (See also Novelty Work) 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Landscape 

Architecture : 

New York School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

Lantern Slide Making 

Clarence H. White School of Photograph}' 60 

New York Institute of Photography 40 

Laundry Work 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts. . 42 

Library Training 

Library School of the New York Public Library 62 

Pratt Institute, School of Library Science 66 

Lunchroom Work 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 56 

Machine Construction 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Machine Operating 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S 32 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls . 34 

Machine Shop Work 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Haaren High School 30 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Edison Company 40 

New York Electrical School 40 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology. 44 

Public School No. 42 (Evening) 44 

Public School No. 95 (Evening Trade School) 44 

82 



PAGE 

46 

R. Hoe and Company • : • • ; 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 

Stuyvesant High School 

Trade School for the Deaf ^" 

Vocational School for Boys 

Manicuring and Shampooing 

Manhattan Evening Trade School ^ 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls • • • • 

Y. W. C. A. — Brooklyn ' • 

New York School of Medical Gymnastics and Massage 66 

Y. W. C. A. — Brooklyn 

Mathematics— (Trade) 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School " 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School -^ 

Bushwick Evening Trade School ; • ^^ 

BuslTO-ick High School ^^ 

Hebrew Technical Institute ^^ 

Manual Training High School ^^ 

Mechanics Institute ' 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School ^^ 

R. Hoe and Company ^^ 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 

Mechanical Dentistry 

Y. M. C. A.— West Side Branch 

Merchandising 

Haaren High School • - ^ 

Y. M. C. A. — Twenty-third Street Branch ^^' 

Metal Working— (See also Sheet Metal Work) 

Hebrew Technical Institute ^ 

Stuyvesant High School 

Millinery o^ 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A ^" 

Bay Ridge High School " 

Bronx Evening High School for Women ^* 

Brookl\-n Evening Technical and Trade School -+ 

Central Evening High School for Women -8 

Clara de Hirsch Home for Working Girls ^^^ 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls '^^ 

Manhattan Evening Trade School '^J 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls ^* 

McDowell Dressmaking and Millinery School -^6 

New Lots Evening High School ^^ 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 4J 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

Trade School for the Deaf, P. S. No. 47 5^* 

83 



PAGE 

Washington Heights Evening High School 52 

y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 56 

Modeling 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Art Students ' League of New York 58 

Cooper Union 60 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Motion Picture Work 

Operating : 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

Y. M. C. A.— West Side Branch 54 

Photography : 

New York Institute of Photography 40 

Multigraphing 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Mural Painting — (See also Art) 

Beaux-Arts Institute of Design 58 

Cooper Union 60 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

Music 

Composition : 

David Mannes Music School 62 

Institute of Musical Art 62 

Seymour School of Musical Re-education 68 

Instrumental : 
Organ : 

David Mannes Music School 62 

Institute of Musical Art 62 

Piano : 

Bronx House Music .School 58 

David Mannes Music School 62 

Institute of Musical Art 62 

Music School of East Side House Settlement 64 

Music School Settlement 64 

Wind Instruments : 

Music School Settlement 64 

Orchestra : 

Bronx House Music School 58 

David Mannes Music School 62 

Institute of Musical Art 62 

Music School of East Side House Settlement 64 

Music School Settlement 64 

84 



PAGE 
Teachers Training : 

Bronx House Music School 5S 

David Maziues Miisic School 62 

Seymour School of Musical Re-education 68 

Vocal : 

David Mamies Music School 62 

Institute of Musical Art 62 

Music School of East Side House Settlement 64- 

Musie School Settlement 64 

Seymour School of Musical Re-education 68 

Navigation 

Navigation, Marine Engineering and Radio School of the Seamen 's 

Church Institute .18 

Novelty Making 

Manhattan Evening Trade School '. . 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women.. 46 

Nursing — (Practical) 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Bay Ridge High School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Savage School for Physical Ediication 68 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn ,56 

Y. W. C. A. — School of Hygiene and Physical Edu<'ation 70 

Office Practice 

Bay Ridge High School 2 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 4 

Central Evening High School for W^omen 4 

High School of Commerce 10 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S ' 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Morris High School 14 

Washington Heights Evening High School 16 

Washington Irving High School 18 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-thiid Street Branch 20 

Young- Women 's Hebrew Association 20 

Oxy-Acetylene Welding 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 54 

Painting — (See Art) 

Painting — (Trade) 

Ho use : 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

New York Trade School 42 

85 



PAGE 

Plain Decorating : 

New York Trade School 42 

Poster : 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

Sign : 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Crippled Children's East Side Free School 28 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S 32 

Murray Hill EA'ening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 67 44 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women.. 46 

Show Card: 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Pattern Drafting 

Garments : 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

McDowell Dressmaking and Millinery School 36 

Pratt Institute, School of Household Science and Arts 42 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Mechanical: 

New York Trade School 42 

Pattern Making 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

New York Trade School 42 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

R. Hoe and Company 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Personnel Management 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Photography 

Clarence H. White School of Photography 60 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

New York Institute of Photography 40 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

86 



PAGE 

Photo-Lithography 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Physical Training 

American Academy of Dramatic Arts 58 

Chalif Normal School of Dancing 58 

Savage School for Physical Education 68 

Y. W. C. A. — Central Branch, School of Hygiene and Physical Educa- 
tion 70 

Plan Reading and Estimating 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

New York Electrical School 40 

Pan- American Electrical Society 42 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Playground Training — (See Teacher Training) 

Plumbing 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 95 (Evening Trade School) 44 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Printing 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S 32 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 5 (Evening) 44 

Public School No. 42 (Evening) 44 

Public School No. 64 (Evening) 44 

School for Printers' Apprentices 46 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

Trade School for the Deaf, P. S. No. 47 50 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

87 



PAGE 

Proof Reading 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Public Speaking and Elocution 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 58 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn Branch 20 

Radio Work 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Navigation, Marine Engineering and Radio School of the Seamen's 

Church Institute 38 

Radio Institute of America 46 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Uttmark 's Radio School 50 

Salesmanship 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 4 

East Side Evening High School 6 

Haaren High School 10 

High School of Commerce ■ 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Morris High School 14 

New York Edison Company 14 

New York Institute of Photography 40 

Y. M. C. A.— Brooklyn 18 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Sample Mounting 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Sculpture — (See Art) 

Secretarial Training — (See Stenography, T3^pewriting, Bookkeep- 
ing, Accounting and Office Practice) 

Sheet Metal Work 

Baron de Hirsch Trade School 22 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

New York Trade School 42 

Public School No. 5 (Evening) 44 

Public School No. 95 (Evening) 44 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 46 

88 



PAGE 

Shoe Cutting and Fitting 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Public School No. 5 (Evening) 44 

Shoe Machine Operating 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Show Cards — (See Painting- Trade) 

Signs — (Electric) 

New York Edison Company 40 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Signs — (See Painting Trade) 

Spanish 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Bay Eidge High School 2 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 4 

Bushwick High School 4 

East Side Evening High School 6 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 6 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn 22 

Young Women's Hebrew Association 20 

Stage Training 

American Academy of Dramatic Arts 58 

Statistics 

High School of Commerce 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Steam and Hot Water Fitting 

New York Trade School 42 

Steam Engineering — (See Engineering) 

Steam Plant Work 

Haaren High School 30 

Pratt Institute, School of Science and Technology 44 

Stenography 

Aub Secretarial School 2 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Bay Ridge High School ■ 2 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 2 

Brooklyn Evening High School 4 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 4 

Bushwick High School 4 

Central Evening High School for Women 4 

Commercial High School 6 

Coopen Union 6 

East Side Evening High School 6 

89 



PAGE 

Eastern Evening High School for Women 6 

Erasmus Hall High School 6 

Evander Childs High School . 8 

Gills Commercial High School 8 

Girls High School 8 

Grace Institute g 

Haaren High School 10 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 10 

High School of Commerce 10 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Merchants and Bankers School 12 

Miller School , 12 

Morris Evening High School 12 

Morris High School 14 

New Lots Evening High School 14 

New Utrecht High School 14 

Packard Commercial School 16 

Public School No. 42 (Evening) 16 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 16 

Theodore Roosevelt High School 16 

Washington Heights Evening High School 16 

Washington Irving High School 18 

Wood 's Business School 18 

Y. M. C. A. — Twenty-third Street Branch 20 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn 18 

Young Women 's Hebrew Association 20 

Story Telling 

Pratt Institute, School of Library Science 66 

Surveying 

Pan-American Electrical Society 42 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Swimming — (See Physical Training) 

Savage School for Physical Education 68 

Y. W. C. A. — School of Hygiene and Physical Education 70 

Tailoring 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Public School No. 67 (Evening) 44 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women. . 46 

Teachers Training 

Art: 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

Dancing : 

Chalif Normal School of Dancing 58 

90 



PAGE 

Manual Training: 

Pratt Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

Music- 
Bronx House Music School 58 

David Mamies Music School 62 

Seymour School of Musical Re-education 68 

Physical Training: 

Chalif Normal School of Dancing 58 

iSavage School for Physical Education . 68 

Y. W. C. A. — School of Hygiene and Physical Education 70 

Photography : 

Clarence H. White School of Photography 60 

Playground Work: 

Savage School for Physical Training 68 

Telegraphy 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

New York Electrical School 40 

Stuyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Uttmark's Radio School 50 

Western Union Telegroph Company 54 

Telephony 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

New York Electrical School 40 

Radio Institute of America 46 

Textiles 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Textile High School 50 

Tool Making 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 26 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Traffic Management 

Y. M. C. A.— West Side Branch 54 

Typewriter Repair 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Typewriting 

Aub Secretarial School 2 

Ballard School— Y. W. C. A 2 

Bay Ridge High School 2 

Bronx Evening High School 4 

Bushwick Evening Trade School 4 

91 



PAGE 

Bushwick High School 4 

Central Evening High School 4 

Commercial High School 6 

Cooper Union 6 

East Side Evening High School G 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 6 

Erasmus Hall High School 6 

Evander Childs High School 8 

Girls Commercial High School 8 

Grace Institute ■■ 8 

Haaren High School 10 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 10 

High School of Commerce 10 

Italian Evening School, C. A. S. S 10 

Julia Richman High School 12 

Katharine Gibbs School 12 

Miller School 12 

Morris Evening High School 12 

Morris High School 14 

New Lots Evening High School 14 

New Utrecht High School 14 

New York School of Filing 14 

Packard Commercial School 16 

Public School No. 42 (Evening) 16 

Seward Park Evening High and Trade School for Men and Women . . 16 

Washington Heights Evening High School 16 

Western Union Telegraph Company 54 

Wood 's Business School 18 

Y. M. C. A.— Twenty- third Street Branch 20 

Y. W. C. A.— Brooklyn 20 

Young Women's Hebrew Association 20 

Weaving 

Rhinelander School, C. A. S. S 46 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

Wireless — (See Radio) 

Wood Carving and Working 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

Stuv^vesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stuyvesant High School 48 

Vocational School for Boys 52 



92 



INDEX of SCHOOLS 

PAGE 

American Academy of Dramatle Art 58 

Art Evening Trade School 22 

Art Students League of Nctf York 58 

Anb Secretarial School 2 

Ballard School 2, 22, 58 

Baron de Hlrsch Trade School 22 

Bay Ridge High School 2, 22 

Beaux Arts Institute of Design 58 

Blind Men's Workshop 22 

Blind Women's W^orkshop 2, 24 

Bronx Evening High School for Women 2, 24 

Bronx House Music School 58 

Brooklyn Evening High School 4, 24 

Brooklyn Evening Technical and Trade School 24 

Brooklyn Vocational School for Boys 26 

BushfFick Evening Trade School 4, 26 

Bushwlck High School 4,26 

Central Evening High School for Women 4, 28 

Chalif Normal School of Dancing 58 

Clara de Hlrsch Home for Working Girls 28 

Clarence H. W^hlte School of Photography 60 

Commercial High School 6 

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art 6, 28 

Crippled Children's East Side Free School 28 

David Mannes Music and Art School 62 

East Side Evening High School 6 

Eastern Evening High School for Men 6,28 

Eastern District High School 6 

Erasmus Hall High School 6, 30 

Evander Childs High School 8 

George Washington High School 8 

Girls Commercial High School 8 

Girls High School 8 

Grace Institute 8 

Haaren High School 10, 30 

Harlem Evening Trade School 30 

Hebrew Technical Institute 32 

Hebrew Technical School for Girls 10, 32 

High School of Commerce 10 

Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men 32 

Institute of Musical Art of the City of New York 62 

Italian Evening School 10, 32 

Julia Rlchman High School 12 

Katherine Glbbs School 12 

Library School of New York Public Library 62 

Manhattan Evening Trade School 34, 64 

Manhattan Trade School for Girls 34 

Manual Training High School 34 

McDow^ell Dressmaking and Millinery School 36 

Mechanics Institute 36 

Merchants and Bankers Business School 12 

Metropolitan Opera Ballet School 64 

Miller School 12 

Morris Evening High School 12 

Morris High School 14 

Murray Hill Evening Trade School 36 

Murray Hill Vocational School 38 

Music School of East Side House Settlement 64 

93 



PAGE 

Music School Settlement 64 

Xatlonal Academy of Design 64 

Navigation, Marine Engineering and Radio School of the Seamen's Church 

Institute 38 

Needlecraf t School 38 

New Lots Evening High School 14, 38 

New York Auto School 38 

New York Edison School 14, 40 

New York Electrical School 40 

New York Institute of Photography 40 

New York School of Applied Design for Women 64 

New York School of Eiling 14 

New^ York School of Fine and Applied Art 66 

New York School of Medical Gymnastics and Massage 66 

New York Trade School 42 

New Utrecht High School 14 

Packard Commercial School 16 

Pan American Electrical Society 42 

Pratt Institute. 

School of Fine and Applied Arts 66 

School of Library Science 66 

School of Household Science and Art 42 

School of Science and Technology 44 

Public School 4 16 

Public School 42 (Evening) Bronx 16, 44 

Public School 95 (Evening) 44 

Public School 5 44 

Public School 67 44 

Public School 64 44 

Puglisi School 42 

Radio Institute of America 46 

Rhinelander School " 46 

R. Hoe and Co 46 

Savage School for Physical Education 68 

School of Design and Liberal Arts 68 

School for Printers Apprentices 46 

Se-ward Park Evening High and Trade School — for Men and Women. . .16, 46 

Seymiour School of Musical Re-education 68 

Ste^vart Automobile School 48 

Stnyvesant Evening Trade School 48 

Stnyvesant High School 48 

Textile Evening Trade School 50 

Textile High School 50 

Theodore Roosevelt High School 16 

Trade School for Deaf P. S. 47 50 

Uttmark's Radio School 50 

Vocational School for Boys 52 

Washington Heights Evening High School 16, 52 

W^ashington Irving Hig^h School 18, 54 

Webbs Academy 70 

Western Union Telegraph '. 18 

Wood's Business School 18 

Y. M. C. A., Brooklyn Branch 18, 54 

Y, M. C. A., 23rd Street Branch 20, 54 

Y. M. C. A., West Side Branch 54 

Y. W. C. A., Central Branch — School of Hygiene and Physical Education. .70 
(Also see Ballard School.) 

Y. W. C. A., Brooklyn Branch 20, 56 

Youns W^omen'a Hebrew Association 20. 56 




019595 513 A 



